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Bosion  'Public  Civrary 


OBCCOWES 
SATHBNAEUNL 


CAROLING  DUSK 


Books  by  Count ec  Cullen 

Color 

Copper  Sun 

The  Ballad  of  the  Brown  Girl 

The  Medea 

The  Lost  Zoo 

My  Lives  and  How  I  Lost  Them 

On  These  I  Stand 

One  Way  to  Heaven 

Edited  by  Count ee  Cullen 

Caroling  Dusk 


CAROLING 
DUSK 


An  Anthology  of  Verse 
by  Negro  Poets 


Edited  by 
COUNTEE  CULLEN 


HARPER  &  ROW,  PUBLISHERS 
New  York,  Evanston,  San  Francisco,  London 


REFERENCE 


caroling  dusk.  Copyright  1927  by  Harper  &  Brothers.  Copyright  renewed 
1955  by  Ida  M.  Cullen.  All  rights  reserved.  Printed  in  the  United  States  of 
America.  No  part  of  this  book  may  be  used  or  reproduced  in  any  manner  what- 
soever without  written  permission  except  in  the  case  of  brief  quotations  em- 
bodied in  critical  articles  and  reviews.  For  information  address  Harper  &  Row, 
Publishers,  Inc.,  10  East  53rd  Street,  New  York,  N.Y.  10022.  Published  simul- 
taneously in  Canada  by  Fitzhenry  &  Whiteside  Limited,  Toronto. 

isbn:  0-06-010926-2 

LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS  CATALOG  CARD  NUMBER:  27-23175 


ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 

For  permission  to  use  the  poems  in  this  anthology,  the 
editor  wishes  to  thank  the  poets  represented,  and  the  fol- 
lowing magazines  and  publishers: 

Dodd,  Mead  and  Co.  for  poems  from  The  Collected  Poems 
of  Paul  Laurence  Dunbar 

Boni  and  Liveright  for  poems  from  Cane  by  Jean  Toomer 

Alfred  A.  Knopf  for  poems  from  The  Weary  Blues  and 
Fine  Clothes  to  the  Jew  by  Langston  Hughes 

The  Viking  Press  for  "The  Creation"  from  God's  Trom- 
bones by  James  Weldon  Johnson 

The  Cornhill  Publishing  Co.  for  poems  from  The  Band  of 
Gideon  by  Joseph  S.  Cotter,  and  from  Fifty  Years  and 
other  Poems  by  James  Weldon  Johnson,  and  from  The 
Heart  of  a  Woman  by  Georgia  Douglas  Johnson 

Harcourt,  Brace  &  Co.  for  poems  from  Harlem  Shadows 
by  Claude  McKay  and  for  A  Litany  of  Atlanta  by  W. 
E.  B.  DuBois 

Harper  &  Brothers  for  poems  from  Color  and  Copper  Sun 
by  Countee  Cullen 

B.  J.  Brimmer  Co.  for  poems  from  Bronze  by  Georgia 
Douglas  Johnson 

Opportunity :  A  Journal  of  Negro  Life  for  Desolate  and 
My  House  by  Claude  McKay;  Old  Black  Men  by  Georgia 
Douglas  Johnson;  Summer  Matures,  Fulfillment,  The 
Road  by  Helene  Johnson;  Portrait  by  George  Leonard 
Allen,;  For  the  Candlelight  by  Angelina  Weld  Grimke; 
The  Return,  Golgotha  Is  a  Mountain,  The  Day  Breakers, 
and  God  Give  to  Men  by  Arna  Bontemps;  I  Have  a 
Rendezvous  With  Life  by  Countee  Cullen;  Lines  Written 


VI  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 

at  the  Grave  of  Alexander  Dumas  and  Hatred  by  Gwen- 
dolyn B.  Bennett;  Joy,  Solace,  Interim  by  Clarissa 
Scott  Delany;  Confession  by  Donald  Jeffrey  Hayes; 
On  Seeing  Two  Brown  Boys  In  a  Catholic  Church 
and  To  a  Persistent  Phantom  by  Frank  Home;  Poem 
by  Blanche  Taylor  Dickinson;  The  New  Negro  by  James 
Edward  McCall ;  The  Tragedy  of  Pete  and  The  Wayside 
Well  by  Joseph  S.  Cotter,  Sr. ;  No  Images  by  Waring 
Cuney;  No'thboun'  by  Lucy  Ariel  Williams;  Shadow 
by  Richard  Bruce;  The  Resurrection  by  Jonathan  H. 
Brooks ;  Africa  and  Transformation  by  Lewis  Alexander 

The  Conning  Tower  of  the  New  York  World  for  Noblesse 
Oblige  by  Jessie  Redmond  Fauset 

The  Crisis  for  That  Hill  by  Blanche  Taylor  Dickinson; 
Nocturne  at  Bethesda  by  Arna  Bontemps ;  Letters  Found 
Near  a  Suicide  by  Frank  Home;  Morning  Light  by 
Mary  Effie  Lee  Newsome;  Dunbar  by  Anne  Spencer 

The  Century  for  My  City  by  James  Weldon  Johnson 

Vanity  Fair  for  Bottled  by  Helene  Johnson 

Palms  for  A  Tree  Design  by  Arna  Bontemps;  Lines  to  a 
Nasturtium  by  Anne  Spencer;  Black  Madonna  by  Albert 
Rice;  Words!  Words!  by  Jessie  Fauset;  Magula  by 
Helene  Johnson;  and  The  Mask  by  Clarissa  Scott 
Delany 

Fire  for  Jungle  Taste  by  Edward  S.  Silvera;  Length  of 
Moon  by  Arna  Bontemps;  The  Death  Bed  by  Waring 
Cuney 

The  World  Tomorrow  for  A  Black  Man  Talks  of  Reaping 
by  Arna  Bontemps 

The  Survey  for  Russian  Cathedral  by  Claude  McKay 

The  Atlantic  Monthly  for  Nativity  and  The  Serving  Girl 
by  Gladys   Casley  Hayford 

The  Carolina  Magazine  for  The  Dark  Brother  by  Lewis 
Alexander 


FOREWORD 

It  is  now  five  years  since  James  Weldon  Johnson 
edited  with  a  brilliant  essay  on  "The  Negro's  Creative 
Genius"  The  Book  of  American  Negro  Poetry,  four 
years  since  the  publication  of  Robert  T.  Kerlin's  Negro 
Poets  and  Their  Poems,  and  three  years  since  from  the 
Trinity  College  Press  in  Durham,  North  Carolina,  came 
An  Anthology  of  Verse  by  American  Negroes,  edited  by 
Newman  Ivey  White  and  Walter  Clinton  Jackson.  The 
student  of  verse  by  American  Negro  poets  will  find  in 
these  three  anthologies  comprehensive  treatment  of  the 
work  of  Negro  poets  from  Phyllis  Wheatley,  the  first 
American  Negro  known  to  have  composed  verses,  to 
writers  of  the  present  day.  With  Mr.  Johnson's  schol- 
arly and  painstaking  survey,  from  both  a  historical 
and  a  critical  standpoint,  of  the  entire  range  of  verse 
by  American  Negroes,  and  with  Professor  Kerlin's  in- 
clusions of  excerpts  from  the  work  of  most  of  those 
Negro  poets  whose  poems  were  extant  at  the  time  of 
his  compilation,  there  would  be  scant  reason  for  the 
assembling  and  publication  of  another  such  collection 
were  it  not  for  the  new  voices  that  within  the  past  three 
to  five  years  have  sung  so  significantly  as  to  make  im- 
perative an  anthology  recording  some  snatches  of  their 
songs.  To  those  intelligently  familiar  with  what  is 
popularly  termed  the  renaissance  in  art  and  literature 


Vlll  FOREWORD 

by  Negroes,  it  will  not  be  taken  as  a  sentimentally  risky 
observation  to  contend  that  the  recent  yearly  contests 
conducted  by  Negro  magazines,  such  as  Opportunity 
and  The  Crisis,  as  well  as  a  growing  tendency  on  the 
part  of  white  editors  to  give  impartial  consideration  to 
the  work  of  Negro  writers,  have  awakened  to  a  happy 
articulation  many  young  Negro  poets  who  had  thitherto 
lisped  only  in  isolated  places  in  solitary  numbers.  It  is 
primarily  to  give  them  a  concerted  hearing  that  this 
collection  has  been  published.  For  most  of  these  poets 
the  publication  of  individual  volumes  of  their  poems  is 
not  an  immediate  issue.  However,  many  of  their  poems 
during  these  four  or  five  years  of  accentuated  interest 
in  the  artistic  development  of  the  race  have  become  fa- 
miliar to  a  large  and  ever-widening  circle  of  readers 
who,  we  feel,  will  welcome  a  volume  marshaling  what 
would  otherwise  remain  for  some  time  a  miscellany  of 
deeply  appreciated  but  scattered  verse. 

The  place  of  poetry  in  the  cultural  development  of  a 
race  or  people  has  always  been  one  of  importance; 
indeed,  poets  are  prone,  with  many  good  reasons  for 
their  conceit,  to  hold  their  art  the  most  important. 
Thus  while  essentially  wishing  to  draw  the  public  ear  to 
the  work  of  the  younger  Negro  poets,  there  have  been 
included  with  their  poems  those  of  modern  Negro  poets 
already  established  and  acknowledged,  by  virtue  of  their 
seniority  and  published  books,  as  worthy  practitioners 
of  their  art.  There  were  Negro  poets  before  Paul  Lau- 
rence Dunbar,  but  his  uniquity  as  the  first  Negro  to 
attain  to   and  maintain  a  distinguished  place  among 


FOREWORD  IX 

American  poets,  a  place  fairly  merited  by  the  most 
acceptable  standards  of  criticism,  makes  him  the  pivotal 
poet  of  this  volume. 

I  have  called  this  collection  an  anthology  of  verse  by 
Negro  poets  rather  than  an  anthology  of  Negro  verse, 
since  this  latter  designation  would  be  more  confusing 
than  accurate.  Negro  poetry,  it  seems  to  me,  in  the 
sense  that  we  speak  of  Russian,  French,  or  Chinese 
poetry,  must  emanate  from  some  country  other  than 
this  in  some  language  other  than  our  own.  Moreover, 
the  attempt  to  corral  the  outbursts  of  the  ebony  muse 
into  some  definite  mold  to  which  all  poetry  by  Negroes 
will  conform  seems  altogether  futile  and  aside  from  the 
facts.  This  country's  Negro  writers  may  here  and 
there  turn  some  singular  facet  toward  the  literary  sun, 
but  in  the  main,  since  theirs  is  also  the  heritage  of  the 
English  language,  their  work  will  not  present  any  seri- 
ous aberration  from  the  poetic  tendencies  of  their  times. 
The  conservatives,  the  middlers,  and  the  arch  heretics 
will  be  found  among  them  as  among  the  white  poets ;  and 
to  say  that  the  pulse  beat  of  their  verse  shows  generally 
such  a  fever,  or  the  symptoms  of  such  an  ague,  will 
prove  on  closer  examination  merely  the  moment's  exag- 
geration of  a  physician  anxious  to  establish  a  new  liter- 
ary ailment.  As  heretical  as  it  may  sound,  there  is  the 
probability  that  Negro  poets,  dependent  as  they  are  on 
the  English  language,  may  have  more  to  gain  from  the 
rich  background  of  English  and  American  poetry  than 
from  any  nebulous  atavistic  yearnings  toward  an  Afri- 
can inheritance.     Some  of  the  poets  herein  represented 


X  FOREWORD 

will  eventually  find  inclusion  in  any  discriminatingly 
ordered  anthology  of  American  verse,  and  there  will 
be  no  reason  for  giving  such  selections  the  needless 
distinction  of  a  separate  section  marked  Negro  verse. 
While  I  do  not  feel  that  the  work  of  these  writers 
conforms  to  anything  that  can  be  called  the  Negro 
school  of  poetry,  neither  do  I  feel  that  their  work  is 
varied  to  the  point  of  being  sensational ;  rather  is  theirs 
a  variety  within  a  uniformity  that  is  trying  to  maintain 
the  higher  traditions  of  English  verse.  I  trust  the 
selections  here  presented  bear  out  this  contention.  The 
poet  writes  out  of  his  experience,  whether  it  be  personal 
or  vicarious,  and  as  these  experiences  differ  among 
other  poets,  so  do  they  differ  among  Negro  poets ;  for 
the  double  obligation  of  being  both  Negro  and  American 
is  not  so  unified  as  we  are  often  led  to  believe.  A  survey 
of  the  work  of  Negro  poets  will  show  that  the  individual 
diversifying  ego  transcends  the  synthesizing  hue.  From 
the  roots  of  varied  experiences  have  flowered  the  dialect 
of  Dunbar,  the  recent  sermon  poems  of  James  Weldon 
Johnson,  and  some  of  Helene  Johnson's  more  colloquial 
verses,  which,  differing  essentially  only  in  a  few  expres- 
sions peculiar  to  Negro  slang,  are  worthy  counterparts 
of  verses  done  by  John  V.  A.  Weaver  "in  American." 
Attempt  to  hedge  all  these  in  with  a  name,  and  your 
imagination  must  deny  the  facts.  Langston  Hughes, 
poetizing  the  blues  in  his  zeal  to  represent  the  Negro 
masses,  and  Sterling  Brown,  combining  a  similar  inter- 
est in  such  poems  as  "Long  Gone"  and  "The  Odyssey  of 
Big  Boy"  with  a  capacity  for  turning  a  neat  sonnet 


FOREWORD  XI 

according  to  the  rules,  represent  differences  as  unique 
as  those  between  Burns  and  Whitman.  Jessie  Fauset 
with  Cornell  University  and  training  at  the  Sorbonne 
as  her  intellectual  equipment  surely  justifies  the  very 
subjects  and  forms  of  her  poems:  "Touche,"  "La  Vie 
C'est  la  Vie,"  "Noblesse  Oblige,"  etc. ;  while  Lewis  Alex- 
ander, with  no  known  degree  from  the  University  of 
Tokyo,  is  equally  within  the  province  of  his  creative 
prerogatives  in  composing  Japanese  hokkus  and  tan- 
kas.  Although  Anne  Spencer  lives  in  Lynchburg,  Vir- 
ginia, and  in  her  biographical  note  recognizes  the  Negro 
as  the  great  American  taboo,  I  have  seen  but  two  poems 
by  her  which  are  even  remotely  concerned  with  this 
subject;  rather  does  she  write  with  a  cool  precision 
that  calls  forth  comparison  with  Amy  Lowell  and  the 
influence  of  a  rock-bound  seacoast.  And  Lula  Lowe 
Weeden,  the  youngest  poet  in  the  volume,  living  in  the 
same  Southern  city,  is  too  young  to  realize  that  she 
is  colored  in  an  environment  calculated  to  impress  her 
daily  with  the  knowledge  of  this  pigmentary  anomaly. 
There  are  lights  and  shades  of  difference  even  in  their 
methods  of  decrying  race  injustices,  where  these  pe- 
culiar experiences  of  Negro  life  cannot  be  over- 
looked. Claude  McKay  is  most  exercised,  rebellious,  and 
vituperative  to  a  degree  that  clouds  his  lyricism  in  many 
instances,  but  silhouettes  most  forcibly  his  high  dud- 
geon; while  neither  Arna  Bontemps,  at  all  times  cool, 
calm,  and  intensely  religious,  nor  Georgia  Douglas 
Johnson,  in  many  instances  bearing  up  bravely  under 
comparison  with  Sara  Teasdale,  takes  advantage  of  the 


XI I  FOREWORD 

numerous     opportunities     offered     them     for     rhymed 
polemics. 

If  dialect  is  missed  in  this  collection,  it  is  enough  to 
state  that  the  day  of  dialect  as  far  as  Negro  poets  are 
concerned  is  in  the  decline.  Added  to  the  fact  that 
these  poets  are  out  of  contact  with  this  fast-dying  me- 
dium, certain  sociological  considerations  and  the  natu- 
ral limitations  of  dialect  for  poetic  expression  militate 
against  its  use  even  as  a  tour  de  force.  In  a  day  when 
artificiality  is  so  vigorously  condemned,  the  Negro  poet 
would  be  foolish  indeed  to  turn  to  dialect.  The  ma- 
jority of  present-day  poems  in  dialect  are  the  efforts 
of  white  poets. 

This  anthology,  by  no  means  offered  as  the  anthology 
of  verse  by  Negro  poets,  is  but  a  prelude,  we  hope,  to 
that  fuller  symphony  which  Negro  poets  will  in  time 
contribute  to  the  national  literature,  and  we  shall  be 
sadly  disappointed  if  the  next  few  years  do  not  find 
this  collection  entirely  outmoded. 

•  •••••• 

The  biographical  notices  carried  with  these  poems 
have  been  written  by  the  poets  themselves  save  in  three 
cases  (Dunbar's  having  been  written  by  his  wife,  the 
younger  Cotter's  by  his  father,  and  Lula  Weeden's  by 
her  mother),  and  if  they  do  not  reveal  to  a  curious 
public  all  it  might  wish  to  know  about  the  poets,  thejT 
at  least  reveal  all  that  the  poets  deem  necessary  and 
discreet  for  the  public  to  know. 

COUNTEE    CULLEN. 


CONTENTS 

Foreword vii 

Paul  Laurence  Dunbar 

Ere  Sleep  Comes  Down  to  Soothe  the  Weary  Eyes       ...  2 

Death  Song 4 

Life 5 

After  the  Quarrel 5 

Ships  that  Pass  in  the  Night 7 

We  Wear  the  Mask 8 

Sympathy 8 

The  Debt 9 

Joseph  S.  Cotter,  Sr. 

The  Tragedy  of  Pete 11 

The  Way-side  Well 15 

James  Weldon  Johnson 

From  the  German  of  Uhland 17 

The  Glory  of  the  Day  Was  in  Her  Face 18 

The  Creation 19 

The  White  Witch 22 

My  City 25 

William  Edward  Burghardt  Du  Bois 

A  Litany  of  Atlanta 26 

William  Stanley  Braithwaite 

Scintilla 31 

Rye  Bread 31 

October  XXIX,  1795 32 

Del  Cascar 33 

James  Edward  McCall 

The  New  Negro 34 

Angelina  Weld  Grimke 

Hushed  by  the  Hands  of  Sleep 36 

Greenness 36 

xiii 


XIV  CONTENTS 

The  Eyes  of  My  Regret 37 

Grass  Fingers 38 

Surrender 38 

The  Ways  o'  Men 39 

Tenebris 40 

When  the  Green  Lies  Over  the  Earth 41 

A  Mona  Lisa 42 

Paradox 43 

Your  Hands 44 

I  Weep 45 

For  the  Candle  Light 45 

Dusk 46 

The  Puppet  Player 46 

A  Winter  Twilight 46 

Anne  Spencer 

Neighbors 47 

I  Have  a  Friend 47 

Substitution 48 

Questing 48 

Life-long,  Poor  Browning 49 

Dunbar 50 

Innocence 51 

Creed 51 

Lines  to  a  Nasturtium 52 

At  the  Carnival 53 

Mary  Effie  Lee  Newsome 

Morning  Light 55 

Pansy 56 

Sassafras  Tea 56 

Sky  Pictures 57 

The  Quilt 58 

The  Baker's  Boy 58 

Wild  Roses 59 

Quoits 59 

John  Frederick  Matheus 

Requiem 61 

Fenton  Johnson 

When  I  Die 62 


CONTENTS  XV 

Puck  Goes  to  Court 63 

The  Marathon  Runner 64 

Jessie  Fauset 

Words!  Words! 65 

Touche 66 

Noblesse  Oblige 67 

La  Vie  C'est  la  Vie 69 

The  Return 70 

Rencontre 70 

Fragment 70 

Alice  Dunbar  Nelson 

Snow  in  October „  71 

Sonnet 72 

I  Sit  and  Sew 73 

Georgia  Douglas  Johnson 

Service 75 

Hope 75 

The  Suppliant 76 

Little  Son 76 

Old  Black  Men 77 

Lethe 77 

Proving 77 

I  Want  to  Die  While  You  Love  Me 78 

Recessional 79 

My  Little  Dreams 79 

What  Need  Have  I  for  Memory? 80 

When  I  Am  Dead 80 

The  Dreams  of  the  Dreamer 80 

The  Heart  of  a  Woman 81 

Claude  McKay 

America 83 

Exhortation:   Summer,  1919 84 

Flame-heart 85 

The  Wild  Goat 87 

Russian  Cathedral 87 

Desolate 88 

Absence 91 

My  House 92 


XVI  CONTENTS 

Jean  Toomer 

Reapers 94 

Evening  Song 94 

Georgia  Dusk 95 

Song  of  the  Son 96 

Cotton  Song 97 

Face 98 

November  Cotton  Flower 99 

Joseph  S.  Cotter,  Jr. 

Rain  Music 100 

Supplication 101 

An  April  Day 102 

The  Deserter 102 

And  What  Shall  You  Say? 103 

The  Band  of  Gideon 103 

Blanche  Taylor  Dickinson 

The  Walls  of  Jericho 106 

Poem 107 

Revelation 107 

That  Hill 109 

To  an  Icicle 110 

Four  Walls 110 

Frank  Horne 

On  Seeing  Two  Brown  Boys  in  a  Catholic  Church        .     .     .  112 

To  a  Persistent  Phantom 113 

Letters  Found  Near  a  Suicide 114 

Nigger 120 

Lewis  Alexander 

Negro  Woman 122 

Africa 123 

Transformation 124 

The  Dark  Brother 124 

Tankal— VIII 125 

Japanese  Hokku 127 

Day  and  Night 129 

Sterling  A.  Brown 

Odyssey  of  Big  Boy 130 


CONTENTS  XV11 

MaumeeRuth 133 

Long  Gone 134 

To  a  Certain  Lady,  in  Her  Garden 136 

Salutamus 138 

Challenge 138 

Return 139 

Clarissa  Scott  Delant 

Joy 140 

Solace 141 

Interim 142 

The  Mask 143 

Langston  Hughes 

I,  Too 145 

Prayer 146 

Song  for  a  Dark  Girl 147 

Homesick  Blues 147 

Fantasy  in  Purple 148 

Dream  Variation 149 

The  Negro  Speaks  of  Rivers 149 

Poem 150 

Suicide's  Note 151 

Mother  to  Son 151 

A  House  in  Taos 152 

Gwendolyn  B.  Bennett 

Quatrains 155 

Secret 155 

Advice 156 

To  a  Dark  Girl 157 

Your  Songs 157 

Fantasy 158 

Lines  Written  at  the  Grave  of  Alexander  Dumas    ....  159 

Hatred 160 

Sonnet— 1 160 

Sonnet— 2 161 

Aena  Bontemps 

The  Return 163 

A  Black  Man  Talks  of  Reaping 165 


XV  111  CONTENTS 

To  a  Young  Girl  Leaving  the  Hill  Country 105 

Nocturne  at  Bethesda 166 

Length  of  Moon 168 

Lancelot 169 

Gethsemane 109 

A  Tree  Design 170 

Blight  170 

The  Day-breakers 171 

Close  Your  Eyes! 171 

God  Give  to  Men 172 

Homing 172 

Golgotha  Is  a  Mountain 173 

Albert  Rice 

The  Black  Madonna 177 

COUNTEE    CULLEN 

Lines  to  Our  Elders 179 

I  Have  a  Rendezvous  with  Life 180 

Protest 181 

Yet  Do  I  Marvel 182 

To  Lovers  of  Earth:  Fair  Warning 182 

From  the  Dark  Tower 183 

To  John  Keats,  Poet,  at  Springtime 184 

Four  Epitaphs 186 

Incident 187 

Donald  Jeffrey  Hates 

Inscription 188 

Auf  Wiedersehen 189 

Night 189 

Confession 190 

Nocturne 190 

After  All 191 

Jonathan  Henderson  Brooks 

The  Resurrection 193 

The  Last  Quarter  Moon  of  the  Dying  Year 195 

Paean 195 

Gladys  May  Casely  Hayford 

Nativity 197 


CONTENTS  XIX 

Rainy  Season  Love  Song 198 

The  Serving  Girl 200 

BabyCobina 200 

Lucy  Ariel  Williams 

Northboun' 201 

George  Leonard  Allen 

To  Melody 204 

Portrait 204 

Richard  Bruce 

Shadow 206 

Cavalier 207 

Waring  Cuney 

The  Death  Bed 208 

A  Triviality 209 

I  Think  I  See  Him  There 210 

Dust 210 

No  Images 212 

The  Radical 212 

True  Love 213 

Edward  S.  Silvera 

South  Street 214 

Jungle  Taste 214 

Helene  Johnson 

What  Do  I  Care  for  Morning 216 

Sonnet  to  a  Negro  in  Harlem 217 

Summer  Matures 217 

Poem 218 

Fulfillment 219 

The  Road 221 

Bottled 221 

Magalu 223 

Wesley  Curtwright 

The  Close  of  Day 225 

Lula  Lowe  Weeden 

Me  Alone 227 

Have  You  Seen  It 228 


XX  CONTENTS 

Robin  Red  Breast 228 

The  Stream 228 

The  Little  Dandelion 229 

Dance 229 

Index 230 


PAUL  LAURENCE   DUNBAR 

Paul  Laurence  Dunbar.  Born,  Dayton,  Ohio,  June  27, 
1872.  Educated  in  public  schools,  and  graduated  from 
Dayton  High  School,  where  he  achieved  some  distinction. 
Editor  of  school  paper,  and  noted  as  a  versifier,  from  his 
grammar-school  days.  Printed  his  first  book,  Oak  and 
Ivy,  in  1893. 

Two  friends  of  his  early  manhood  helped  most  to  shape 
his  career,  and  to  encourage  him  in  his  days  of  struggle — 
Dr.  H.  A.  Tobey,  the  celebrated  alienist  of  Toledo,  Ohio, 
and  Frederick  Douglass.  The  former  helped  him  to  bring 
his  second  book,  Majors  and  Minors,  before  the  public;  the 
latter,  with  whom  he  was  associated  in  the  Negro  Building 
at  the  World's  Fair  in  Chicago  in  1893,  was  the  hero  of  the 
poet's  dreams,  the  one  to  whom  he  dedicated  two  of  his 
most  serious  poems. 

Although  Dunbar  is  remembered  largely  for  his  dialect 
verse,  it  was  never  his  intention  to  concentrate  on  dialect. 
His  poems  in  pure  English  constitute  the  greater  bulk  of 
his  verse,  and  that  to  which  he  was  most  passionately  de- 
voted. The  tragedy  of  his  life  was  that  the  world  "turned 
to  praise  the  jingle  in  a  broken  tongue. "  His  friendship 
for  Booker  Washington  and  a  visit  to  Tuskegee  inspired 
him  to  write  the  Tuskegee  School  Song,  which  is  sung  to 
the  tune  of  "Fair  Harvard." 

The  famous  criticism  of  Majors  and  Minors  by  William 
Dean  Howells  in  Harper's  Weekly,  June  27,  1897  estab- 
lished Dunbar's  prestige  as  an  important  figure  in  American 
literature.     From  that  time  his  success  was   assured. 

He  was  married  to  Alice  Ruth  Moore  of  New  Orleans,  a 
teacher  in  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  in  March,  1898. 

1 


2  PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

He  was  as  indefatigable  a  writer  of  prose  as  of  poetry; 
short  stories,  novels,  criticism,  essays  and  some  short  plays 
poured  from  his  pen.  His  published  works,  exclusive  of 
the  two  volumes  of  verse  mentioned  above,  are:  Lyrics  of 
Lowly  Life,  Lyrics  of  the  Hearthside,  Lyrics  of  Sunshine 
and  Shadow;  several  smaller  volumes,  illustrated  editions 
of  poems  in  the  preceding  volumes;  short  stories,  Folks 
from  Dixie,  The  Strength  of  Gideon;  novels,  The  Un- 
called, The  Fanatics,  The  Love  of  Landry,  The  Sport  of 
the  Gods. 

He  died  in  Dayton,  Ohio,  February  9,  1906. 

Alice  Dunbar  "Nelson. 


ERE     SLEEP     COMES    DOWN    TO 
SOOTHE    THE    WEARY   EYES1 

Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes, 
Which  all  the  day  with  ceaseless  care  have  sought 
The  magic  gold  which  from  the  seeker  flies ; 
Ere  dreams  put  on  the  gown  and  cap  of  thought, 
And  make  the  waking  world  a  world  of  lies, — 
Of  lies  most  palpable,  uncouth,  forlorn, 
That  say  life's  full  of  aches  and  tears  and  sighs, — 
Oh,  how  with  more  than  dreams  the  soul  is  torn, 
Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes. 

Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes, 
How  all  the  griefs  and  heartaches  we  have  known 
Come  up  like  pois'nous  vapors  that  arise 
From  some  base  witch's  caldron,  when  the  crone, 

1  Copyright  1806  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

To  work  some  potent  spell,  her  magic  plies. 
The  past  which  held  its  share  of  bitter  pain, 
Whose  ghost  we  prayed  that  Time  might  exorcise, 
Comes  up,  is  lived  and  suffered  o'er  again, 
Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes. 

Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes, 
What  phantoms  fill  the  dimly  lighted  room ; 
What  ghostly  shades  in  awe-creating  guise 
Are  bodied  forth  within  the  teeming  gloom. 
What  echoes  faint  of  sad  and  soul-sick  cries, 
And  pangs  of  vague  inexplicable  pain 
That  pay  the  spirit's  ceaseless  enterprise, 
Come  thronging  through  the  chambers  of  the  brain, 
Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes. 

Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes, 
Where  ranges  forth  the  spirit  far  and  free? 
Through  what  strange  realms  and  unfamiliar  skies 
Tends  her  far  course  to  lands  of  mystery? 
To  lands  unspeakable — beyond  surmise, 
Where  shapes  unknowable  to  being  spring, 
Till,  faint  of  wing,  the  Fancy  fails  and  dies 
Much  wearied  with  the  spirit's  journeying, 
Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes. 

Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes, 
How  questioneth  the  soul  that  other  soul, — 
The  inner  sense  which  neither  cheats  nor  lies, 
But  self  exposes  unto  self,  a  scroll 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

Full  writ  with  all  life's  acts  unwise  or  wise, 

In  characters  indelible  and  known; 

So,  trembling  with  the  shock  of  sad  surprise, 

The  soul  doth  view  its  awful  self  alone, 

Ere  sleep  comes  down  to  soothe  the  weary  eyes. 

When  sleep  comes  down  to  seal  the  weary  eyes, 

The  last  dear  sleep  whose  soft  embrace  is  balm, 

And  whom  sad  sorrow  teaches  us  to  prize 

For  kissing  all  our  passions  into  calm, 

Ah,  then,  no  more  we  heed  the  sad  world's  cries, 

Or  seek  to  probe  th'  eternal  mystery, 

Or  fret  our  souls  at  long-withheld  replies, 

At  glooms  through  which  our  visions  cannot  see, 

When  sleep  comes  down  to  seal  the  weary  eyes. 

DEATH    SONG1 

Lay  me  down  beneaf  de  willers  in  de  grass, 

Whah  de  branch'll  go  a-singin'  as  it  pass. 

An'  w'en  I's  a-layin'  low, 

I  kin  hyeah  it  as  it  go 

Singin',  "Sleep,  my  honey,  tek  yo'  res'  at  lasV 

Lay  me  nigh  to  whah  hit  meks  a  little  pool, 

An'  de  watah  stan's  so  quiet  lak  an'  cool, 

Whah  de  little  birds  in  spring, 

Ust  to  come  an'  drink  an'  sing, 

An'  de  chillen  waded  on  dey  way  to  school. 

Copyright  1896  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

Let  me  settle  w'en  my  shouldahs  draps  dey  load 
Nigh  enough  to  hyeah  de  noises  in  de  road ; 

Fu'  I  t'ink  de  las'  long  res' 

Gwine  to  soothe  my  sperrit  bes' 
If  I's  layin'  'mong  de  t'ings  Fs  alius  knowed. 


LIFE1 

A  crust  of  bread  and  a  corner  to  sleep  in, 
A  minute  to  smile  and  an  hour  to  weep  in, 
A  pint  of  j  oy  to  a  peck  of  trouble, 
And  never  a  laugh  but  the  moans  come  double : 
And  that  is  life! 

A  crust  and  a  corner  that  love  makes  precious, 
With  the  smile  to  warm  and  the  tears  to  refresh  us 
And  joy  seems  sweeter  when  cares  come  after, 
And  a  moan  is  the  finest  of  foils  for  laughter : 
And  that  is  life ! 


AFTER    THE    QUARREL2 

So  we,  who've  supped  the  self-same  cup, 
To-night  must  lay  our  friendship  by ; 
Your  wrath  has  burned  your  judgment  up, 
Hot  breath  has  blown  the  ashes  high. 

1  Copyright  1896  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 

2  Copyright  1896  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

You  say  that  you  are  wronged — ah,  well, 
I  count  that  friendship  poor,  at  best 
A  bauble,  a  mere  bagatelle, 
That  cannot  stand  so  slight  a  test. 

I  fain  would  still  have  been  your  friend, 

And  talked  and  laughed  and  loved  with  you; 

But  since  it  must,  why,  let  it  end ; 

The  false  but  dies,  'tis  not  the  true. 

So  we  are  favored,  you  and  I, 

Who  only  want  the  living  truth. 

It  was  not  good  to  nurse  the  lie ; 

'Tis  well  it  died  in  harmless  youth. 

I  go  from  you  to-night  to  sleep. 

Why,  what's  the  odds?  why  should  I  grieve? 

I  have  no  fund  of  tears  to  weep 

For  happenings  that  undeceive. 

The  days  shall  come,  the  days  shall  go 

Just  as  they  came  and  went  before. 

The  sun  shall  shine,  the  streams  shall  flow 

Though  you  and  I  are  friends  no  more. 

And  in  the  volume  of  my  years, 

Where  all  my  thoughts  and  acts  shall  be, 

The  page  whereon  your  name  appears 

Shall  be  forever  sealed  to  me. 

Not  that  I  hate  you  over-much, 

'Tis  less  of  hate  than  love  defied ; 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

Howe'er,  our  hands  no  more  shall  touch, 
We'll  go  our  ways,  the  world  is  wide. 


SHIPS    THAT    PASS    IN    THE 
NIGHT1 

Out  in  the  sky  the  great  dark  clouds  are  massing ; 

I  look  far  out  into  the  pregnant  night, 

Where  I  can  hear  a  solemn  booming  gun 

And  catch  the  gleaming  of  a  random  light, 

That  tells  me  that  the  ship  I  seek  is  passing,  passing. 

My  tearful  eyes  my  soul's  deep  hurt  are  glassing; 
For  I  would  hail  and  check  that  ship  of  ships. 
I  stretch  my  hands  imploring,  cry  aloud, 
My  voice  falls  dead  a  foot  from  mine  own  lips, 
And  but  its  ghost  doth  reach  that  vessel, 
passing,  passing. 

O  Earth,  O  Sky,  O  Ocean,  both  surpassing, 
O  heart  of  mine,  O  soul  that  dreads  the  dark ! 
Is  there  no  hope  for  me?    Is  there  no  way 
That  I  may  sight  and  check  that  speeding  bark 
Which  out  of  sight  and  sound  is  passing, 

passing? 

1  Copyright  1806  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

WE   WEAR   THE   MASK1 

We  wear  the  mask  that  grins  and  lies, 

It  hides  our  cheeks   and  shades  our  eyes,- 

This  debt  we  pay  to  human  guile ; 

With  torn  and  bleeding  hearts  we  smile, 

And  mouth  with  myriad  subtleties. 

Why  should  the  world  be  over-wise, 
In  counting  all  our  tears  and  sighs? 
Nay,  let  them  only  see  us,  while 
We  wear  the  mask. 

We  smile,  but,  O  great  Christ,  our  cries 
To  thee  from  tortured  souls  arise. 
We  sing,  but  oh  the  clay  is  vile 
Beneath  our  feet,  and  long  the  mile ; 
But  let  the  world  dream  otherwise, 
We  wear  the  mask ! 


SYMPATHY2 

I  know  what  the  caged  bird  feels,  alas ! 

When  the  sun  is  bright  on  the  upland  slopes ; 

When  the  wind  stirs  soft  through  the  springing  grass 

And  the  river  flows  like  a  stream  of  glass ; 

When  the  first  bird  sings  and  the  first  bud  opes, 

i  Copyright  1896  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 
'Copyright  1896  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 


PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR  9 

And  the  faint  perfume  from  its  chalice  steals — 
I  know  what  the  caged  bird  feels ! 

I  know  why  the  caged  bird  beats  his  wing 
Till  its  blood  is  red  on  the  cruel  bars ; 
For  he  must  fly  back  to  his  perch  and  cling 
When  he  fain  would  be  on  the  bough  a-swing; 
And  a  pain  still  throbs  in  the  old,  old  scars 
And  they  pulse  again  with  a  keener  sting — 

I  know  why  he  beats  his  wing ! 

I  know  why  the  caged  bird  sings,  ah  me, 

When  his  wing  is  bruised  and  his  bosom  sore, — 

When  he  beats  his  bars  and  he  would  be  free; 

It  is  not  a  carol  of  joy  or  glee, 

But  a  prayer  that  he  sends  from  his  heart's  deep  core, 

But  a  plea,  that  upward  to  Heaven  he  flings — 

I  know  why  the  caged  bird  sings ! 


THE  DEBT1 

This  is  the  debt  I  pay 
Just  for  one  riotous  day, 
Years  of  regret  and  grief, 
Sorrow  without  relief. 

Pay  it  I  will  to  the  end — 
Until  the  grave,  my  friend, 

1  Copyright  1896  by  Dodd,  Mead  &  Company,  Inc. 


10  PAUL    LAURENCE    DUNBAR 

Gives  me  a  true  release — 
Gives  me  the  clasp  of  peace. 

Slight  was  the  thing  I  bought, 
Small  was  the  debt  I  thought, 
Poor  was  the  loan  at  best — 
God !  but  the  interest ! 


JOSEPH    S.    COTTER,    SR. 

"I  was  born  in  Nelson  County,  Ky.,  February  2nd,  1861, 
on  a  farm  owned  by  my  great  grandfather,  Daniel  Stapp, 
a  tanner.  In  1829  he  bought  himself  and  a  part  of  his 
master's  farm.  Later  he  bought  his  daughter,  Lucinda, 
my  mother's   mother. 

Martha,  my  mother,  was  born  on  a  nearby  farm  owned 
by  her  English-Indian  father,  Fleming  Vaughan.  Prior 
to  my  birth  she  lived  in  Bardstown  and  was  a  servant  at 
"My  Old  Kentucky  Home."  She  took  me  to  Bardstown 
soon  after  my  birth  and  brought  me  to  Louisville  in  my 
fourth  week,  and  here  I  have  lived  ever  since. 

I  attended  a  private  school  and  could  read  before  my 
fourth  year.  Conditions  were  such  that  my  attendance  at 
school  was  very  irregular.  I  quit  school  in  my  eighth 
year,  having  completed  the  third  grade,  and  did  not  return 
Until  my  twenty-second  year. 

During  this  time  I  picked  up  rags  in  the  streets  and 
worked  in  tobacco  factories  and  brick-yards.  My  nine- 
teenth year  found  me  a  distiller  in  one  of  the  largest 
distilleries  in  Kentucky.  A  turn  of  fortune  made  me  a 
teamster.  I  hauled  cotton  and  tobacco  and  made  up  my 
mind  to  enter  the  prize  ring.  Another  turn  of  fortune 
put   me   into   a    Louisville   public   night   school.      Here   I 


JOSEPH    S.    COTTER,    SR.  11 

began  in  the  third  grade  where  I  left  off  in  my  eighth 
year. 

At  the  end  of  two  school  sessions  of  five  months  each 
I  was  promoted  to  the  high  school.  I  keep  this  diploma 
under  lock  and  key,  for  it  is  the  only  one  I  have  ever 
received. 

The  man  who  turned  my  attention  from  prize-fighting  to 
night  school  and  then  to  school  teaching,  and  who  dis- 
covered my  knack  for  writing  verses,  was  Dr.  W.  T. 
Peyton  of  Louisville.     He  was  my  greatest  benefactor. 

My  talent  of  whatever  kind  comes  from  Martha,  my 
mother.  She  was  poet,  story-teller,  dramatist  and  musi- 
cian. My  published  works  are:  A  Rhyming,  Links  of 
Friendship,  Caleb,  the  Degenerate,  a  poetic  drama,  A  White 
Song  And  A  Black  One  and  Negro  Tales.  My  unpub- 
lished works  are:  Life's  Dawn  And  Dusk,  poems,  Caesar 
Driftwood  and  Other  One  Act  Plays  and  My  Mother  And 
Her  Family. 


THE    TRAGEDY    OF    PETE 

There  was  a  man 

Whose  name  was  Pete, 
And  he  was  a  buck 

From  his  head  to  his  feet. 

He  loved  a  dollar,        r         .'.'•'• 

-  »  Kit**"  »     •         r    «  w 

But^MVaiiije;^*    " 

And  soVafpWr  -  ,  '*     ' 

Nine-tenftts  of 'C  time,  *   -'"library- 

The  guff  <*  saM^Pete, " 
What  of  your  wife?" 


12 


JOSEPH     8.     COTTER,     SR 

And  Pete  replied 
"She  lost  her  life." 


"Pete,"  said  the  Judge, 
"Was  it  lost  in  a  row? 

Tell  me  quick, 

And  tell  me  how." 


Pete  straightened  up 
With  a  hie  and  a  sigh, 

Then  looked  the  Judge 
Full  in  the  eye. 

"O,  Judge,  my  wife 

Would  never  go 
To  a  Sunday  dance 

Or  a  movie  show. 

"But  I  went,  Judge, 
Both  day  and  night, 

And  came  home  broke 
And  also  tight. 

"The  moon  was  up, 
My  purse  was  down, 

And  I  was  the  bully 
Of  the  bootleg  town. 


"I  was  crooning  a  lilt 
To  corn  and  rye 


JOSEPH    S.    COTTER,    SR.  13 

For  the  loop  in  my  legs 
And  the  fight  in  my  eye. 

"I  met  my  wife ; 

She  was  wearing  a  frown, 
And  catechising 

Her  Sunday  gown. 

'O  Pete,  O  Pete5 

She  cried  aloud, 
'The  Devil  is  falling 

Right  out  of  a  cloud/ 

"I  looked  straight  up 

And  fell  flat  down 
And  a  Ford  machine 

Pinned  my  head  to  the  ground. 

"The  Ford  moved  on, 

And  my  wife  was  in  it; 
And  I  was  sober, 

That  very  minute. 

"For  my  head  was  bleeding, 

My  heart  was  a-flutter; 
And  the  moonshine  within  me 

Was  tipping  the  gutter. 

"The  Ford,  it  faster 
And  faster  sped 


14  JOSEPH    8.    COTTER,    SR 

Till  it  dipped  and  swerved 
And  my  wife  was  dead. 

"Two  bruised  men  lay 
In  a  hospital  ward — 

One  seeking  vengeance, 
The  other  the  Lord. 

"He  said  to  me: 

'Your  wife  was  drunk, 

You  are  crazy, 

And  my  Ford  is  junk.' 

"I  raised  my  knife 

And  drove  it  in 
At  the  top  of  his  head 

And  the  point  of  his  chin. 

"O  Judge,  0  Judge, 

If  the  State  has  a  chair, 

Please  bind  me  in  it 
And  roast  me  there." 

There  was  a  man 

Whose  name  was  Pete, 

And  he  welcomed  death 
From  his  head  to  his  feet. 


JOSEPH    S.     COTTER,    SR.  15 

THE    WAY-SIDE    WELL 

A  fancy  halts  my  feet  at  the  way-side  well. 

It  is  not  to  drink,  for  they  say  the  water  is  brackish. 

It  is  not  to  tryst,  for  a  heart  at  the  mile's  end 
beckons  me  on. 

It  is  not  to  rest,  for  what  feet  could  be  weary  when 
a  heart  at  the  mile's  end  keeps  time  with  their  tread  ? 

It  is  not  to  muse,  for  the  heart  at  the  mile's  end  is 
food  for  my  being. 

I  will  question  the  well  for  my  secret  by  dropping 
a  pebble  into  it. 

Ah,  it  is  dry. 

Strike  lightning  to  the  road,  my  feet,  for  hearts 
are  like  wells.  You  may  not  know  they  are  dry  'til  you 
question  their  depths. 

Fancies  clog  the  way  to  Heaven,  and  saints  miss 
their  crown. 

JAMES     WELDON     JOHNSON 

James  Weldon  Johnson  was  born  in  Jacksonville,  Fla. 
He  graduated  from  Atlanta  University  with  the  degree  of 
A.  B.,  and  he  received  the  degree  of  A.  M.  from  the  same 
University  in  1904.  He  spent  three  years  in  graduate 
work  at  Columbia  University  in  the  City  of  New  York. 
The  honorary  degree  of  Litt.D.  was  conferred  upon  him 
by  Talladega  College,  Talladega,  Ala.,  in  1917,  and  by 
Howard  University  in   1923. 

For   several    years    Mr.    Johnson   was    principal    of   the 


16  JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON 

colored  high  school  at  Jacksonville.  He  was  admitted  to 
the  Florida  bar  in  1897,  and  practiced  law  in  Jacksonville, 
until  1901,  when  he  moved  to  New  York  to  collaborate 
with  his  brother,  J.  Rosamond  Johnson,  in  writing  for  the 
light  opera  stage. 

In  1906,  he  was  appointed  United  States  Consul  at 
Puerto  Cabello,  Venezuela,  being  transferred  as  Consul  to 
Corinto,  Nicaragua,  in  1909.  While  in  Corinto,  he  looked 
after  the  interests  of  his  country  during  the  stormy  days 
of  revolution  which  resulted  in  the  downfall  of  Zelaya,  and 
through  the  abortive  revolution  against  Diaz. 

His  knowledge  of  Spanish  has  been  put  to  use  in  the 
translation  of  a  number  of  Spanish  plays.  He  was  the 
translator  for  the  English  libretto  of  Goyescas,  the  Span- 
ish grand  opera  produced  by  the  Metropolitan  Opera  Com- 
pany in  1915. 

Mr.  Johnson  was  for  ten  years  the  Contributing  Editor 
of  the  New  York  Age,  He  added  to  his  distinction  as  a 
newspaper  writer  by  winning  in  an  editorial  contest  one 
of  three  prizes  offered  by  the  Philadelphia  Public  Ledger 
in  1916.  His  poems  have  appeared  in  the  Century,  the 
Independent,  the  Crisis  and  other  publications. 

In  the  spring  of  1920,  Mr.  Johnson  was  sent  by  the 
National  Association  for  the  Advancement  of  Colored 
People  to  the  black  republic  of  Haiti,  where  he  made  an 
investigation  of  U.  S.  misrule.  The  charges  which  Mr. 
Johnson  published  in  The  Nation,  of  New  York,  upon  his 
return  were  taken  up  by  Senator  Harding,  and  as  a  con- 
sequence a  Naval  Board  of  Inquiry  was  sent  to  Haiti  and 
a  Congressional  Investigation  promised.  The  articles  pub- 
lished in  The  Nation  have  since  been  republished  in  a 
pamphlet  entitled,  "Self-Determining  Haiti." 

Mr.  Johnson  is  Secretary  of  the  National  Association 
for  the  Advancement  of  Colored  People,  a  member  of  the 
Board   of   Directors    of   the    American   Fund    for    Public 


JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON  17 

Service    (The   Garland   Fund),  and  a  trustee  of  Atlanta 
University. 

Mr.  Johnson's  works  include: 

The  Autobiography  of  an  Ex-Colored  Man 

Fifty  Years  and  Other  Poems 

English  Libretto  of  "Goyescas" 

The  Booh  of  American  Negro  Poetry 

The  Booh  of  American  Negro  Spirituals 

Second  Booh  of  Negro  Spirituals 

God's   Trombones  (Seven  Negro  Sermons  in  Verse) 


FROM  THE  GERMAN  OF  UHLAND 

Three  students  once  tarried  over  the  Rhine, 
And  into  Frau  Wirthin's  turned  to  dine. 

"Say,  hostess,  have  you  good  beer  and  wine? 
And  where  is  that  pretty  daughter  of  thine?" 

"My  beer  and  wine  is  fresh  and  clear. 
My  daughter  lies  on  her  funeral  bier." 

They  softly  tipped  into  the  room ; 
She  lay  there  in  the  silent  gloom. 

The  first  the  white  cloth  gently  raised, 
And  tearfully  upon  her  gazed. 

"If  thou  wert  alive,  O,  lovely  maid, 

My  heart  at  thy  feet  would  to-day  be  laid !" 


18  JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON 

The  second  covered  her  face  again, 
And  turned  away  with  grief  and  pain. 

"Ah,  thou  upon  thy  snow-white  bier! 
And  I  have  loved  thee  so  many  a  year." 

The  third  drew  back  again  the  veil, 
And  kissed  the  lips  so  cold  and  pale. 

"I've  loved  thee  always,  I  love  thee  to-day, 
And  will  love  thee,  yes,  forever  and  aye !" 


THE  GLORY  OF  THE  DAY  WAS  IN 
HER  FACE 

The  glory  of  the  day  was  in  her  face, 
The  beauty  of  the  night  was  in  her  eyes. 
And  over  all  her  loveliness,  the  grace 
Of  Morning  blushing  in  the  early  skies. 

And  in  her  voice,  the  calling  of  the  dove ; 
Like  music  of  a  sweet,  melodious  part. 
And  in  her  smile,  the  breaking  light  of  love ; 
And  all  the  gentle  virtues  in  her  heart. 

And  now  the  glorious  day,  the  beauteous  night, 
The  birds  that  signal  to  their  mates  at  dawn, 
To  my  dull  ears,  to  my  tear-blinded  sight 
Are  one  with  all  the  dead,  since  she  is  gone. 


JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON  19 

THE    CREATION 

(A  Negro  Sermon) 

And  God  stepped  out  on  space, 
And  he  looked  around  and  said, 
"I'm  lonely — 
I'll  make  me  a  world." 

And  far  as  the  eye  of  God  could  see 
Darkness  covered  everything, 
Blacker  than  a  hundred  midnights 
Down  in  a  cypress  swamp. 

Then  God  smiled, 

And  the  light  broke, 

And  the  darkness  rolled  up  on  one  side, 

And  the  light  stood  shining  on  the  other, 

And  God  said,  "That's  good!" 

Then  God  reached  out  and  took  the  light  in  His  hands, 

And  God  rolled  the  light  around  in  His  hands 

Until  He  made  the  sun; 

And  He  set  that  sun  a-blazing  in  the  heavens. 

And  the  light  that  was  left  from  making  the  sun 

God  gathered  it  up  in  a  shining  ball 

And  flung  it  against  the  darkness, 

Spangling  the  night  with  the  moon  and  stars. 

Then  down  between 


20  JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON 

The  darkness   and   the  light 

He  hurled  the  world; 

And  God  said,  "That's  good!" 

Then  God  himself  stepped  down — 
And  the  sun  was  on  His  right  hand, 
And  the  moon  was  on  His  left; 
The  stars  were  clustered  about  His  head, 
And  the  earth  was  under  His  feet. 
And  God  walked,  and  where  He  trod 
His  footsteps  hollowed  the  valleys  out 
And  bulged  the  mountains  up. 

Then  He  stopped  and  looked  and  saw 

That  the  earth  was  hot  and  barren. 

So  God  stepped  over  to  the  edge  of  the  world 

And  He  spat  out  the  seven  seas ; 

He  batted  His  eyes,  and  the  lightnings  flashed ; 

He  clapped  His  hands,  and  the  thunders  rolled ; 

And  the  waters  above  the  earth  came  down, 

The  cooling  waters  came  down. 

Then  the  green  grass  sprouted, 

And  the  little  red  flowers  blossomed, 

The  pine  tree  pointed  his  finger  to  the  sky, 

And  the  oak  spread  out  his  arms, 

The  lakes  cuddled  down  in  the  hollows  of  the  ground, 

And  the  rivers  ran  down  to  the  sea ; 

And  God  smiled  again, 


JAMBS    WE  L  DON    JOHNSON  21 

And  the  rainbow  appeared, 

And  curled  itself  around  His  shoulder. 


Then  God  raised  His  arm  and  He  waved  His  hand 

Over  the  sea  and  over  the  land, 

And  He  said,  "Bring  forth!     Bring  forth!" 

And  quicker  than  God  could  drop  His  hand, 

Fishes  and  fowls 

And  beasts  and  birds 

Swam  the  rivers  and  the  seas, 

Roamed  the  forests  and  the  woods, 

And  split  the  air  with  their  wings. 

And  God  said,  "That's  good!" 

Then  God  walked  around, 
And  God  looked  around 
On  all  that  He  had  made. 
He  looked  at  His  sun, 
And  He  looked  at  His  moon, 
And  He  looked  at  His  little  stars ; 
He  looked  on  His  world 
With  all  its  living  things, 
And  God  said,  "Vm  lonely  still" 

Then  God  sat  down 

On  the  side  of  a  hill  where  He  could  think ; 

By  a  deep,  wide  river  He  sat  down ; 

With  His  head  in  His  hands, 

God  thought  and  thought, 

Till  He  thought,  "Til  make  me  a  man!" 


22  JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON 

Up  from  the  bed  of  the  river 

God  scooped  the  clay  ; 

And  by  the  bank  of  the  river 

He  kneeled  Him  down; 

And  there  the  great  God  Almighty 

Who  lit  the  sun  and  fixed  it  in  the  sky, 

Who  flung  the  stars  to  the  most  far  corner  of  the  night, 

Who  rounded  the  earth  in  the  middle  of  His  hand ; 

This  Great  God, 

Like  a  mammy  bending  over  her  baby, 

Kneeled  down  in  the  dust 

Toiling  over  a  lump  of  clay 

Till  He  shaped  it  in  His  own  image; 

Then  into  it  He  blew  the  breath  of  life, 
And  man  became  a  living  soul. 
Amen.     Amen. 


THE  WHITE  WITCH 

O  brothers  mine,  take  care!     Take  care! 
The  great  white  witch  rides  out  to-night. 
Trust  not  your  prowess  nor  your  strength, 
Your  only  safety  lies  in  flight; 
For  in  her  glance  is  a  snare, 
And  in  her  smile  there  is  a  blight. 

The  great  white  witch  you  have  not  seen? 
Then,  younger  brothers  mine,  forsooth, 


JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON  23 

Like  nursery  children  you  have  looked 
For  ancient  hag  and  snaggle-tooth; 
But  no,  not  so;  the  witch  appears 
In  all  the  glowing  charms  of  youth. 

Her  lips  are  like  carnations,  red, 
Her  face  like  new-born  lilies,  fair, 
Her  eyes  like  ocean  waters,  blue, 
She  moves  with  subtle  grace  and  air, 
And  all  about  her  head  there  floats 
The  golden  glory  of  her  hair. 

But  though  she  always  thus  appears 
In  form  of  youth  and  mood  of  mirth, 
Unnumbered  centuries  are  hers, 
The  infant  planets  saw  her  birth ; 
The  child  of  throbbing  Life  is  she, 
Twin  sister  to  the  greedy  earth. 

And  back  behind  those  smiling  lips, 
And  down  within  those  laughing  eyes, 
And  underneath  the  soft  caress 
Of  hand  and  voice  and  purring  sighs, 
The  shadow  of  the  panther  lurks, 
The  spirit  of  the  vampire  lies. 

For  I  have  seen  the  great  white  witch, 
And  she  has  led  me  to  her  lair, 
And  I  have  kissed  her  red,  red  lips 
And  cruel  face  so  white  and  fair; 


24  JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON 

Around  mc  she  has  twined  her  arms, 
And  bound  me  with  her  yellow  hair. 

I  felt  those  red  lips  burn  and  sear 
My  body  like  a  living  coal ; 
Obeyed  the  power  of  those  eyes 
As  the  needle  trembles  to  the  pole; 
And  did  not  care  although  I  felt 
The  strength  go  ebbing  from  my  soul. 

Oh !  she  has  seen  your  strong  young  limbs, 

And  heard  your  laughter  loud  and  gay, 

And  in  your  voices  she  has  caught 

The  echo  of  a  far-off  day, 

When  man  was  closer  to  the  earth; 

And  she  has  marked  you  for  her  prey. 

She  feels  the  old  Antaean  strength 
In  you,  the  great  dynamic  beat 
Of  primal  passions,  and  she  sees 
In  you  the  last  besieged  retreat 
Of  love  relentless,  lusty,  fierce, 
Love  pain-ecstatic,  cruel-sweet. 

O,  brothers  mine,  take  care !    Take  care ! 
The  great  white  witch  rides  out  to-night. 
O,  younger  brothers  mine,  beware; 
Look  not  upon  her  beauty  bright ; 
For  in  her  glance  there  is  a  snare, 
And  in  her  smile  there  is  a  blight. 


JAMES    WELDON    JOHNSON  25 

MY   CITY 

When  I  come  down  to  sleep  death's  endless  night, 
The  threshold  of  the  unknown  dark  to  cross, 
What  to  me  then  will  be  the  keenest  loss, 
When  this  bright  world  blurs  on  my  fading  sight? 
Will  it  be  that  no  more  I  shall  see  the  trees 
Or  smell  the  flowers  or  hear  the  singing  birds 
Or  watch  the  flashing  streams  or  patient  herds? 
No,  I  am  sure  it  will  be  none  of  these. 

But,  ah !  Manhattan's  sights  and  sounds,  her  smells, 

Her  crowds,  her  throbbing  force,  the  thrill  that  comes 

From  being  of  her  a  part,  her  subtile  spells, 

Her  shining  towers,  her  avenues,  her  slums — 

O  God !  the  stark,  unutterable  pity, 

To  be  dead,  and  never  again  behold  my  city! 


WILLIAM    EDWARD     BURGHARDT 
DU     BOIS 

I  was  born  in  Massachusetts  and  educated  in  her  schools, 
at  Fisk  University,  at  Harvard  and  Berlin.  My  first  pub- 
lished writings  were  news  notes  in  The  New  York  Age. 
Then  I  had  an  article  in  The  Atlantic  Monthly  and  in  1896 
my  doctor's  thesis  on  the  slave  trade  was  published  as  my 
first  book.  The  Souls  of  Black  Folk  appeared  in  1903 
and  one  or  two  other  books  thereafter.  1  taught  at  Wil- 
berforce,  Pennsylvania  and  Atlanta  and  became  editor  of 
The  Crisis  in   1910. 


2G     WILLIAM    EDWARD    BURGHARDT    DU    BOIS 

A    LITANY    OF    ATLANTA1 

Done  at  Atlanta,  in  the  Day  of  Death,  1906. 

O  Silent  God,  Thou  whose  voice  afar  in  mist  and 
mystery  hath  left  our  ears  an-hungered  in  these  fearful 
days — 

Hear  us,  good  Lord! 

Listen  to  us,  Thy  children:  our  faces  dark  with  doubt 
are  made  a  mockery  in  Thy  sanctuary.  With  uplifted 
hands  we  front  Thy  heaven,  O  God  crying: 

We  beseech  Thee  to  hear  us,  good  Lord! 

We  are  not  better  than  our  fellows,  Lord,  we  are  but 
weak  and  human  men.  When  our  devils  do  deviltry, 
curse  Thou  the  doer  and  the  deed:  curse  them  as  we 
curse  them,  do  to  them  all  and  more  than  ever  they  have 
done  to  innocence  and  weakness,  to  womanhood  and 
home. 

Have  mercy  upon  us,  miserable  sinners! 

And  yet  whose  is  the  deeper  guilt?  Who  made  these 
devils?  Who  nursed  them  in  crime  and  fed  them  on  in- 
justice? Who  ravished  and  debauched  their  mothers 
and  their  grandmothers?  Who  bought  and  sold  their 
crime,  and  waxed  fat  and  rich  on  public  iniquity? 

Thou  hnowest,  good  God! 

iFrom  "Dark  Water"  by  W.  E.  B.  Du  Bois,  Copyright  1920  by  Harcourt,  Brace  & 
Company,  Inc. 


WILLIAM   EDWARD    BURGHARDT    DU   BOIS     27 

Is  this  Thy  Justice,  O  Father,  that  guile  be  easier 
than  innocence,  and  the  innocent  crucified  for  the  guilt 
of  the  untouched  guilty? 

justice,  0  Judge  of  men! 

Wherefore  do  we  pray  ?  Is  not  the  God  of  the  fathers 
dead?  Have  not  seers  seen  in  Heaven's  halls  Thine 
hearsed  and  lifeless  form  stark  amidst  the  black  and 
rolling  smoke  of  sin,  where  all  along  bow  bitter  forms 
of  endless  dead? 

Awake,  Thou  that  steepest! 

Thou  art  not  dead,  but  flown  afar,  up  hills  of  endless 
light,  thru  blazing  corridors  of  suns,  where  worlds  do 
swing  of  good  and  gentle  men,  of  women  strong  and  free 
— far  from  the  cozenage,  black  hypocrisy  and  chaste 
prostitution  of  this  shameful  speck  of  dust ! 

Turn  again,  0  Lord,  leave  us  not  to  perish  in  our  sin! 

From  lust  of  body  and  lust  of  blood 
Great  God,  deliver  us! 

From  lust  of  power  and  lust  of  gold, 
Great  God,  deliver  us! 

From  the  leagued  lying  of  despot  and  of  brute, 
Great  God,  deliver  us! 

A  city  lay  in  travail,  God  our  Lord,  and  from  her 
loins  sprang  twin  Murder  and  Black  Hate.     Red  was 


28     WILLIAM    EDWARD    BURGIIARDT    DU    BOIS 

the  midnight;  clang,  crack  and  cry  of  death  and  fury 
filled  the  air  and  trembled  underneath  the  stars  when 
church  spires  pointed  silently  to  Thee.  And  all  this 
was  to  sate  the  greed  of  greedy  men  who  hide  behind 
the  veil  of  vengeance ! 

Bend  us  Thine  ear,  0  Lord! 

In  the  pale,  still  morning  we  looked  upon  the  deed. 
We  stopped  our  ears  and  held  our  leaping  hands,  but 
they — did  they  not  wag  their  heads  and  leer  and  cry 
with  bloody  jaws:  Cease  from  Crime!  The  word  was 
mockery,  for  thus  they  train  a  hundred  crimes  while 
we  do  cure  one. 

Turn  again  our  captivity,  O  Lord! 

Behold  this  maimed  and  broken  thing;  dear  God,  it 
was  an  humble  black  man  who  toiled  and  sweat  to  save 
a  bit  from  the  pittance  paid  him.  They  told  him: 
Work  and  Rise.  He  worked.  Did  this  man  sin  ?  Nay, 
but  some  one  told  how  some  one  said  another  did — one 
whom  he  had  never  seen  nor  known.  Yet  for  that  man's 
crime  this  man  lieth  maimed  and  murdered,  his  wife 
naked  to  shame,  his  children,  to  poverty  and  evil. 

Hear  us,  0  Heavenly  Father! 

Doth  not  this  justice  of  hell  stink  in  Thy  nostrils, 
O  God?  How  long  shall  the  mounting  flood  of  innocent 
blood  roar  in  Thine  ears  and  pound  in  our  hearts  for 
vengeance?    Pile  the  pale  frenzy  of  blood-crazed  brutes 


WILLIAM   EDWARD   BURGHARDT   DU  BOIS     29 

who  do  such  deeds  high  on  Thine  altar,  Jehovah  Jireh, 
and  burn  it  in  hell  forever  and  forever! 

Forgive  us,  good  Lord;  we  know  not  what  we  say! 

Bewildered  we  are,  and  passion-tost,  mad  with  the 
madness  of  a  mobbed  and  mocked  and  murdered  people ; 
straining  at  the  armposts  of  Thy  Throne,  we  raise  our 
shackled  hands  and  charge  Thee,  God,  by  the  bones  of 
our  stolen  fathers,  by  the  tears  of  our  dead  mothers, 
by  the  very  blood  of  Thy  crucified  Christ:  What 
meaneth  this?     Tell  us  the  Plan;  give  us  the  Sign! 

Keep  not  Thou  silence,  0  God! 

Sit  no  longer  blind,  Lord  God,  deaf  to  our  prayer 
and  dumb  to  our  dumb  suffering.  Surely,  Thou  too  art 
not  white,  O  Lord,  a  pale,  bloodless,  heartless  thing? 

Ah!  Christ  of  all  the  Pities! 

Forgive  the  thought!  Forgive  these  wild,  blasphe- 
mous words.  Thou  art  still  the  God  of  our  black 
fathers,  and  in  Thy  soul's  soul  sit  some  soft  darkenings 
of  the  evening,  some  shadowings  of  the  velvet  night. 

But  whisper — speak — call,  great  God,  for  Thy  sil- 
ence is  white  terror  to  our  hearts !  The  way,  O  God, 
show  us  the  way  and  point  us  the  path. 

Whither?    North  is  greed  and  South  is  blood ;  within, 
the  coward,  and  without  the  liar.    Whither?    To  death? 
Amen!     Welcome  dark  sleep! 


30      WILLIAM    EDWARD    BURGIIARDT    DU   BOIS 

Whither?  To  life?  But  not  this  life,  dear  God,  not 
this.  Let  the  cup  pass  from  us,  tempt  us  not  beyond 
our  strength,  for  there  is  that  clamoring  and  clawing 
within,  to  whose  voice  we  would  not  listen,  yet  shudder 
lest  we  must,  and  it  is  red,  Ah !  God !  It  is  a  red  and 
awful  shape. 

Selahl 

In  yonder  East  trembles  a  star. 

Vengeance  is  mine;  I  will  repay,  saith  the  Lord! 

Thy  will,  O  Lord,  be  done ! 
Kyrie  Eleison! 

Lord,  we  have  done  these  pleading,  wavering  words. 
We  beseech  Thee  to  hear  us,  good  Lord! 

We  bow  our  heads  and  hearken  soft  to  the  sobbing  of 
women  and  little  children. 

We  beseech  Thee  to  hear  us,  good  Lord! 

Our  voices  sink  in  silence  and  in  night. 
Hear  us,  good  Lord! 

In  night,  O  God  of  a  godless  land ! 
Amen! 

In  silence,  0  Silent  God. 
Selahl 


WILLIAM    STANLEY    BRAITHWAITE     31 

WILLIAM     STANLEY     BRAITHWAITE 

William  Stanley  Braithwaite  was  born  in  Boston 
Dec.  6,  1878.  He  inherited  the  incentives  and  ideals  of  the 
intellect  from  an  ancestry  of  British  gentlemen.  He  has 
written  verse  and  prose  and  was  for  many  years  leading 
reviewer  of  books  in  the  Boston  Transcript.  He  has  pub- 
lished twenty  volumes,  and  his  yearly  anthology  of  verse 
establishes  for  each  year  the  best  poetry  printed  in  the 
magazines. 


SCINTILLA 


I  kissed  a  kiss  in  youth 

Upon  a  dead  man's  brow ; 

And  that  was  long  ago, — 
And  I'm  a  grown  man  now. 

It's  lain  there  in  the  dust, 
Thirty  years  and  more ; — 

My  lips  that  set  a  light 
At  a  dead  man's  door. 


RYE   BREAD 

Father  John's  bread  was  made  of  rye, 
Felicite's  bread  was  white; 
Father  John  loved  the  sun  noon-high, 
Felicite,  the  moon  at  night. 


32      WILLIAM    STANLEY    BRAITIIWAITE 

Father  John  drank  wine  with  his  bread; 
Felicite  drank  sweet  milk; 
Father  John  loved  flowers,  pungent  and  red ; 
Felicite,  lilies  soft  as  silk. 

Father  John's  soul  was  made  of  bronze, 
That  God's  salt  was  corroding; 
Felicite's  soul  was  a  wind  that  runs 
With  a  blue  flame  of  foreboding. 

Between  these  two  was  the  shadow  of  a  dome 
That  cut  their  lives  in  twain ; 
But  Dionysus  led  them  home 
In  a  chariot  of  pain. 


OCTOBER  XXIX,  1795 

(Keats'  Birthday) 

Time  sitting  on  the  throne  of  Memory 

Bade  all  her  subject  Days  the  past  had  known 

Arise  and  say  what  thing  gave  them  renown 

Unforgetable,  'Rising  from  the  sea, 

I  gave  the  Genoese  his  dreams  to  be ;' 

'I  saw  the  Corsican's  Guards  swept  down ;' 

'Colonies  I  made  free  from  a  tyrant's  crown ;' — 

So  each  Day  told  its  immortality. 

And  with  these  blazing  triumphs  spoke  one  voice 


WILLIAM    STANLEY    BRAITHWAITB      33 

Whose  wistful  speech  no  vaunting  did  employ : 
$I  know  not  if  'twere  by  Fate's  chance  or  choice 
I  hold  the  lowly  birth  of  an  English  boy; 
I  only  know  he  made  man's  heart  rejoice 
Because  he  played  with  Beauty  for  a  toy !' 


DEL  CASCAR 

Del  Cascar,  Del  Cascar 
Stood  upon  a  flaming  star, 
Stood  and  let  his  feet  hang  down 
Till  in  China  the  toes  turned  brown. 

And  he  reached  his  fingers  over 
The  rim  of  the  sea,  like  sails  from  Dover, 
And  caught  a  Mandarin  at  prayer, 
And  tickled  his  nose  in  Orion's  hair. 

The  sun  went  down  through  crimson  bars, 
And  left  his  blind  face  battered  with  stars- 
But  the  brown  toes  in  China  kept 
Hot  the  tears  Del  Cascar  wept. 


JAMES     EDWARD     McCALL 

James  Edward  McCall  was  born  September  2,  1880  at 
Montgomery,  Ala.,  and  received  his  early  education  in  the 
public  schools  of  that  city.  Graduating  from  the  Alabama 
State  Normal  in  1900  he  entered  Howard  University  as 


34  JAMES    EDWARD    McCALL 

a  medical  student  the  same  year,  but  some  months  later 
was  forced  to  abandon  his  medical  career,  following  an 
attack  of  typhoid  fever  leading  to  total  blindness.  Un- 
daunted by  this  misfortune,  he  at  once  set  out  to  develop 
his  literary  talent.  During  this  period  he  read  and  studied 
much  through  the  eyes  of  others,  also  writing  many  poems, 
a  number  of  which  were  published  in  Southern  dailies,  the 
New  York  World  and  other  periodicals.  The  Montgomery 
(Alabama)  Advertiser  styled  him  "The  Blind  Tom  of 
Literature."  One  of  his  poems,  "Meditation/'  has  been 
compared  to  Bryant's  "Thanatopsis." 

Despite  his  handicap,  McCall  determined  to  acquire  a 
college  education.  Accompanied  by  his  sister,  he  entered 
Albion  College  (Michigan)  in  1905,  where  he  was  grad- 
uated two  years  later,  being  the  only  sightless  student  in 
the  college.  Returning  to  his  natal  city,  he  took  up  jour- 
nalistic work,  for  some  years  being  employed  as  a  special 
writer  for  one  of  the  local  white  dailies,  also  contributing 
to  other  periodicals,  and  ultimately  publishing  at  Mont- 
gomery a  successful  race  weekly — The  Emancipator. 

This  blind  writer  is  ably  assisted  in  his  journalistic 
work  by  his  wife,  to  whom  he  was  married  in  1914.  He 
and  his  family  moved  to  Detroit  in  1920.  He  is  city 
editor  and  editorial  writer  for  the  Detroit  Independent, 
his  editorials  in  this  publication  having  been  widely  read 
and  re-published  throughout  the  country  during  the  past 
two  years. 


THE  NEW  NEGRO 

He  scans  the  world  with  calm  and  fearless  eyes, 

Conscious  within  of  powers  long  since  forgot; 
At  every  step,  new  man-made  barriers   rise 


JAMES    EDWARD     McCALL  35 

To  bar  his  progress — but  he  heeds  them  not. 
He  stands  erect,  though  tempests  round  him  crash, 

Though  thunder  bursts  and  billows  surge  and  roll; 
He  laughs  and  forges  on,  while  lightnings  flash 

Along  the  rocky  pathway  to  his  goal. 
Impassive  as  a  Sphinx,  he  stares  ahead — 

Foresees  new  empires  rise  and  old  ones  fall; 
While  caste-mad  nations  lust  for  blood  to  shed, 

He  sees  God's  finger  writing  on  the  wall. 
With  soul  awakened,  wise  and  strong  he  stands, 
Holding  his  destiny  within  his  hands. 


ANGELINA    WELD     GRIMKfi 

Angelina  Weld  Grimke  was  born  in  Boston,  Mass.,  Feb- 
ruary 27,  1880.  She  was  a  student  at  Carleton  Academy, 
Northfield,  Minn.,  Cushing  Academy,  Ashburnham,  Mass., 
and  Girls'  Latin  School,  Boston.  In  1902  she  was  grad- 
uated from  the  Boston  Normal  School  of  Gymnastics. 
In  1902  she  began  her  career  as  a  teacher  in  the  Arm- 
strong Manual  Training  School  in  Washington,  D.  C; 
since  1916  she  has  taught  in  the  Dunbar  High  School 
in  the  same  city.  She  is  the  author  of  a  three  act  play 
Rachel  published  in  1920,  short  stories,  and  numerous 
poems. 


86  ANGELINA     WELD     GRIMKE 

HUSHED  BY  THE  HANDS  OF  SLEEP 
(To  Dr.  George  F.  Grant) 


Hushed  by  the  hands  of  Sleep, 

By  the  beautiful  hands  of  Sleep. 
Very  gentle  and  quiet  he  lies, 
With  a  little  smile  of  sweet  surprise, 
Just  softly  hushed  at  lips  and  eyes, 
Hushed  by  the  hands  of  Sleep, 
By  the  beautiful  hands  of  Sleep. 


// 


Hushed  by  the  hands  of  Sleep, 

By  the  beautiful  hands  of  Sleep. 
Death  leaned  down  as  his  eyes  grew  dim, 
And  his  face,  I  know,  was  not  strange,  not  grim, 
But  oh !  it  was  beautiful  to  him, 

Hushed  by  the  hands  of  Sleep, 
By  the  beautiful  hands  of  Sleep. 


GREENNESS 

Tell  me  is  there  anything  lovelier, 
Anything  more  quieting 


ANGELINA    WELD    GRIMK^  37 

Than  the  green  of  little  blades  of  grass 
And  the  green  of  little  leaves? 

Is  not  each  leaf  a  cool  green  hand, 

Is  not  each  blade  of  grass  a  mothering  green  finger, 

Hushing  the  heart  that  beats  and  beats  and  beats? 

THE  EYES  OF  MY  REGRET 

Always  at  dusk,  the  same  tearless  experience, 

The  same  dragging  of  feet  up  the  same  well-worn  path 

To  the  same  well-worn  rock ; 

The  same  crimson  or  gold  dropping  away  of  the  sun, 

The  same  tints — rose,  saffron,  violet,  lavender,  grey, 

Meeting,  mingling,  mixing  mistily ; 

Before  me  the  same  blue  black  cedar  rising  j  aggedly  to 

a  point; 
Over  it,  the  same  slow  unlidding  of  twin  stars, 
Two  eyes  unfathomable,  soul-searing, 
Watching,  watching — watching  me; 
The  same  two  eyes  that  draw  me  forth,  against  my  will 

dusk  after  dusk; 
The  same  two  eyes  that  keep  me  sitting  late  into  the 

night,  chin  on  knees, 
Keep  me  there  lonely,  rigid,  tearless,  numbly  miserable, 

— The  eyes  of  my  Regret. 


S8  ANGELINA     WELD    GRIMKE 

GRASS    FINGERS 

Touch  me,  touch  me, 

Little  cool  grass  fingers, 

Elusive,  delicate  grass  fingers. 

With  your  shy  brushings, 

Touch  my  face — 

My  naked  arms — 

My  thighs — 

My  feet. 

Is  there  nothing  that  is  kind? 

You  need  not  fear  me. 

Soon  I  shall  be  too  far  beneath  you, 

For  you  to  reach  me,  even, 

With  your  tiny,  timorous  toes. 


SURRENDER 

We  ask  for  peace.    We,  at  the  bound 
O  life,  are  weary  of  the  round 
In  search  of  Truth.    We  know  the  quest 
Is  not  for  us,  the  vision  blest 
Is  meant  for  other  eyes.     Uncrowned, 
We  go,  with  heads  bowed  to  the  ground, 
And  old  hands,  gnarled  and  hard  and  browned, 
Let  us  forget  the  past  unrest, — 
We  ask  for  peace. 


ANGELINA    WELD    G  R  I  M  K  £  39 

Our  strained  ears  are  deaf, — no  sound 
May  reach  them  more ;  no  sight  may  wound 
Our  worn-out  eyes.     We  gave  our  best, 
And,  while  we  totter  down  the  West, 
Unto  that  last,  that  open  mound, — 
We  ask  for  peace. 


THE   WAYS    O'   MEN 

'Tis  queer,  it  is,  the  ways  o'  men, 
Their  comin's  and  their  goin's ; 
For  there's  the  grey  road, 

The  straight  road 
With  the  grey  dust  liftin* 

With  ev'ry  step 
And  the  little  roads  off-flingin'. 

Maybe  it's  a  bit  of  a  sly  field 
That  crooks  a  finger  to  them 
And  sends  them  to  the  turnin'; 
Or  the  round  firm  bosom 

Of  a  little  hill 
Acallin'  to  them,  them  with  their  heads 

That  heavy; 
Or  maybe  it's  the  black  look 

Given  out  of  the  tail  of  the  eye; 
Or  a  white  word,  wingin'; 
Maybe  it's  only  the  back  of  a  little  tot's  neck 
In  the  sunlight ; 


40  ANGELINA    WELD    G  It  I  M  K  £ 

Or  the  red  lips  of  a  woman 
Parting  slow.   .   .  . 
Sure  there's  no  tellin'. 

One  I  saw  goin'  towards  a  white  star 

At  the  edge  of  a  daffydill  sky, 

Its  lights  kissin'  straight  into  his  eyes. 
Maybe  it's  a  gold  piece 
To  be  taken  from  another 

In  the  dark; 
Or  the  neat  place  between  the  ribs 
Waitin'  for  the  knife 
That  one  comes  after  carryin'  for  it. 
'Tis  few,  it  is,  that  goes  with  the  grey  road 

The  straight  road 

All  the  way, 
With  the  grey  dust  liftin'  at  ev'ry  step. 

'Tis  queer,  it  is,  the  ways  o*  men, 
With  a  level  look  at  you,  or  a  crooked 
As  they  be  passin'. 

Pouf! 
Sure,  'tis  so  fast  they're  goin', 
Does  it  matter  about  the  turnin's? 


TENEBRIS 

There  is  a  tree,  by  day, 
That,  at  night, 


ANGELINA    WELD    GRIMKlS  41 

Has  a  shadow, 

A  hand  huge  and  black, 

With  fingers  long  and  black. 

All  through  the  dark, 
Against  the  white  man's  house, 

In  the  little  wind, 
The  black  hand  plucks  and  plucks 

At  the  bricks. 
The  bricks  are  the  color  of  blood  and  very  small. 

Is  it  a  black  hand, 

Or  is  it  a  shadow? 


WHEN  THE  GREEN  LIES  OVER 
THE  EARTH 


When  the  green  lies  over  the  earth,  my  dear, 

A  mantle  of  witching  grace, 

When  the  smile  and  the  tear  of  the  young  child  year 

Dimple  across  its  face, 

And  then  flee,  when  the  wind  all  day  is  sweet 

With  the  breath  of  growing  things, 

When  the  wooing  bird  lights  on  restless  feet 

And  chirrups  and  trills  and  sings 

To  his  lady-love 

In  the  green  above, 
Then  oh !  my  dear,  when  the  youth's  in  the  year, 


42  ANGELINA    WELD    GRIMKlS 

Yours  is  the  face  that  I  long  to  have  near, 
Yours  is  the  face,  my  dear. 

But  the  green  is  hiding  your  curls,  my  dear, 
Your  curls  so  shining  and  sweet; 
And  the  gold-hearted  daisies  this  many  a  year 
Have  bloomed  and  bloomed  at  your  feet, 
And  the  little  birds  just  above  your  head 
With  their  voices  hushed,  my  dear, 
For  you  have  sung  and  have  prayed  and  have  pled 
This  many,  many  a  year. 

And  the  blossoms  fall, 

On  the  garden  wall, 
And  drift  like  snow  on  the  green  below. 

But  the  sharp  thorn  grows 

On  the  budding  rose, 
And  my  heart  no  more  leaps  at  the  sunset  glow. 
For  oh !  my  dear,  when  the  youth's  in  the  year, 
Yours  is  the  face  that  I  long  to  have  near, 
Yours  is  the  face,  my  dear. 


A    MONA    LISA 


I  should  like  to  creep 
Through  the  long  brown  grasses 
That  are  your  lashes ; 


ANGELINA    WELD    GRIMKlS  43 

I  should  like  to  poise 

On  the  very  brink 
Of  the  leaf-brown  pools 

That  are  your  shadowed  eyes ; 
I  should  like  to  cleave 

Without  sound, 
Their  glimmering  waters, 

Their  unrippled  waters, 
I  should  like  to  sink  down 

And  down 

And  down  .... 
And  deeply  drown. 


Would  I  be  more  than  a  bubble  breaking  ? 

Or  an  ever-widening  circle 

Ceasing  at  the  marge? 
Would  my  white  bones 

Be  the  only  white  bones 
Wavering  back  and  forth,  back  and  forth 

In  their  depths? 


PARADOX 


When  face  to  face  we  stand 

And  eye  to  eye, 
How  far  apart  we  are 


44  ANGELINA    WELD    G  R  I  M  K  £ 

As  far,  they  say,  as  God  can  ever  be 
From  what,  they  say,  is  Hell. 


But,  when  we  stand 

Fronting  the  other, 

Mile  after  mile  slipping  in  between, 

O,  close  we  are, 

As  close  as  is  the  shadow  to  the  body, 

As  breath,  to  life, 

As  kisses  are  to  love. 


YOUR    HANDS 

I  love  your  hands : 
They  are  big  hands,  firm  hands,  gentle  hands ; 
Hair  grows  on  the  back  near  the  wrist  .  .  .  . 
I  have  seen  the  nails  broken  and  stained 
From  hard  work. 
And  yet,  when  you  touch  me, 

I  grow  small and  quiet 

And  happy  

If  I  might  only  grow  small  enough 

To  curl  up  into  the  hollow  of  your  palm, 

Your  left  palm, 

Curl  up,  lie  close  and  cling, 


ANGELINA    WELD    G  R  I  M  K  £  45 

So  that  I  might  know  myself  always  there, 
Even  if  you  forgot. 


I    WEEP 

—  I  weep  — 
Not  as  the  young  do  noisily, 
Not  as  the  aged  rustily, 

But  quietly. 
Drop  by  drop  the  great  tears 
Splash  upon  my  hands, 
And  save  you  saw  them  shine, 
You  would  not  know 
I  wept. 


FOR    THE    CANDLE    LIGHT 

The  sky  was  blue,  so  blue  that  day 
And  each  daisy  white,  so  white, 

O,  I  knew  that  no  more  could  rains  fall  grey 
And  night  again  be  night. 


I  knew,  I  knew.    Well,  if  night  is  night, 
And  the  grey  skies  greyly  cry, 

I  have  in  a  book  for  the  candle  light, 
A  daisy  dead  and  dry. 


46  ANGELINA    WELD    G  R  I  M  K  £ 

DUSK 

Twin  stars  through  my  purpling  pane, 

The  shriveling  husk 
Of  a  yellowing  moon  on  the  wane — 

And  the  dusk. 

THE    PUPPET    PLAYER 

Sometimes  it  seems  as  though  some  puppet  player 
A  clenched  claw  cupping  a  craggy  chin, 

Sits  just  beyond  the  border  of  our  seeing, 

Twitching  the  strings  with  slow  sardonic  grin. 

A    WINTER    TWILIGHT 

A  silence  slipping  around  like  death, 
Yet  chased  by  a  whisper,  a  sigh,  a  breath ; 
One  group  of  trees,  lean,  naked  and  cold, 
Inking  their  crests  'gainst  a  sky  green-gold ; 
One  path  that  knows  where  the  corn  flowers  were ; 
Lonely,  apart,  unyielding,  one  fir; 
And  over  it  softly  leaning  down, 
One  star  that  I  loved  ere  the  fields  went  brown. 


ANNE    SPENCER  47 

ANNE     SPENCER 

From  Lynchburg,  Va.,  where  she  lives,  Anne  Spencer 
writes,  "Mother  Nature,  February,  forty-five  years  ago 
forced  me  on  the  stage  that  I,  in  turn,  might  assume  the 
role  of  lonely  child,  happy  wife,  perplexed  mother — and, 
so  far,  a  twice  resentful  grandmother.  I  have  no  academic 
honors,  nor  lodge  regalia.  I  am  a  Christian  by  intention, 
a  Methodist  by  inheritance,  and  a  Baptist  by  marriage.  I 
write  about  some  of  the  things  I  love.  But  have  no  civil- 
ized articulation  for  the  things  I  hate.  I  proudly  love 
being  a  Negro  woman — its  so  involved  and  interesting. 
We  are  the  PROBLEM — the  great  national  game  of 
TABOO." 

NEIGHBORS 

Ah,  you  are  cruel ; 
You  ask  too  much ; 
Offered  a  hand,  a  finger-tip, 
You  must  have  a  soul  to  clutch. 


I    HAVE    A    FRIEND 

I  have  a  friend 
And  my  heart  from  hence 
Is  closed  to  friendship, 
Nor  the  gods'  knees  hold  but  one ; 
He  watches  with  me  thru  the  long  night, 
And  when  I  call  he  comes, 
Or  when  he  calls  I  am  there ; 


48  ANNE    SPENCER 

He  docs  not  ask  me  how  beloved 
Are  my  husband  and  children, 
Nor  ever  do  I  require 
Details  of  life  and  love 
In  the  grave — his  home, — 
We  are  such  friends. 

SUBSTITUTION 

Is  Life  itself  but  many  ways  of  thought, 

Does  thinking  furl  the  poets'  pleiades, 

Is  in  His  slightest  convolution  wrought 

These  mantled  worlds  and  their  men-freighted  seas? 

He  thinks — and  being  comes  to  ardent  things  : 

The  splendor  of  the  day-spent  sun,  love's  birth, — 

Or  dreams  a  little,  while  creation  swings 

The  circle  of  His  mind  and  Time's  full  girth  .  .  . 

As  here  within  this  noisy  peopled  room 

My   thought  leans   forward  .  .  .  quick!  you're  lifted 

clear 
Of  brick  and  frame  to  moonlit  garden  bloom, — 
Absurdly  easy,  now,  our  walking,  dear, 
Talking,  my  leaning  close  to  touch  your  face  .  .  . 
His  Ali-Mind  bids  us  keep  this  sacred  place! 

QUESTING 

Let  me  learn  now  where  Beauty  is  ; 
My  day  is  spent  too  far  toward  night 


ANNE    SPENCER  49 

To  wander  aimlessly  and  miss  her  place; 

To  grope,  eyes  shut,  and  fingers  touching  space. 

Her  maidens  I  have  known,  seen  durance  beside, 

Handmaidens  to  the  Queen,  whose  duty  bids 

Them  lie  and  lure  afield  their  Vestal's  acolyte, 

Lest  a  human  shake  the  throne,  lest  a  god  should  know 

his  might: 
Nereid,  daughter  of  the  Trident,  steering  in  her  shell, 
Paused  in  voyage,  smile  beguiling,  tempted  and  I  fell; 
Spiteful    dryads,    sport    forsaking,    tossing    birchen 

wreathes, 
Left  the  Druidic  priests  they  teased  so 
In  the  oaken  trees,  crying,  "Ho  a  mortal!  here  a  be- 
liever !" 
Bound  me,  she  who  held  the  sceptre,  stricken  by  her, 

ah,  deceiver  .  .  . 
But  let  me  learn  now  where  Beauty  is ; 
I  was  born  to  know  her  mysteries, 
And  needing  wisdom  I  must  go  in  vain : 
Being  sworn  bring  to  some  hither  land, 
Leaf  from  her  brow,  light  from  her  torched  hand. 


LIFE-LONG,    POOR    BROWNING., 

Life-long,  poor  Browning  never  knew  Virginia, 
Or  he'd  not  grieved  in  Florence  for  April  sallies 
Back  to  English  gardens  after  Euclid's  linear: 
Clipt  yews,  Pomander  Walks,  and  pleached  alleys ; 


50  ANNE    SPENCER 

Primroses,  prim  indeed,  in  quite  ordered  hedges, 
Waterways,  soberly,  sedately  enchanneled, 
No  thin  riotous  blade  even  among  the  sedges, 
All  the  wild  country-side  tamely  impaneled  .  .  . 

Dead,  now,  dear  Browning,  lives  on  in  heaven, — 
(Heaven's  Virginia  when  the  year's  at  its  Spring) 
He's  haunting  the  byways  of  wine-aired  leaven 
And  throating  the  notes  of  the  wildings  on  wing ; 

Here  canopied  reaches  of  dogwood  and  hazel, 
Beech  tree  and  redbud  fine-laced  in  vines, 
Fleet  clapping  rills  by  lush  fern  and  basil, 
Drain  blue  hills  to  lowlands  scented  with  pines  .  .  . 

Think  you  he  meets  in  this  tender  green  sweetness 
Shade  that  was  Elizabeth  .  .  .  immortal  completeness ! 


DUNBAR 

Ah,  how  poets  sing  and  die ! 
Make  one  song  and  Heaven  takes  it ; 
Have  one  heart  and  Beauty  breaks  it ; 
Chatterton,  Shelley,  Keats  and  I — 
Ah,  how  poets  sing  and  die! 


ANNE    SPENCER  51 

INNOCENCE 

She  tripped  and  fell  against  a  star, 
A  lady  we  all  have  known; 
Just  what  the  villagers  lusted  for 
To  claim  her  one  of  their  own ; 
Fallen  but  once  the  lower  felt  she, 
So  turned  her  face  and  died, — 
With  never  a  hounding  fool  to  see 
*Twas  a  star-lance  in  her  side ! 

CREED 

If  my  garden  oak  spares  one  bare  ledge 

For  a  boughed  mistletoe  to  grow  and  wedge ; 

And  all  the  wild  birds  this  year  should  know 

I  cherish  their  freedom  to  come  and  go ; 

If  a  battered  worthless  dog,  masterless,  alone, 

Slinks  to  my  heels,  sure  of  bed  and  bone ; 

And  the  boy  just  moved  in,  deigns  a  glance-assay, 

Turns  his  pockets  inside  out,  calls,  "Come  and  play !" 

If  I  should  surprise  in  the  eyes  of  my  friend 

That  the  deed  was  my  favor  he'd  let  me  lend ; 

Or  hear  it  repeated  from  a  foe  I  despise, 

That  I  whom  he  hated  was  chary  of  lies ; 

If  a  pilgrim  stranger,  fainting  and  poor, 

Followed  an  urge  and  rapped  at  my  door, 

And  my  husband  loves  me  till  death  puts  apart, 

Less  as  flesh  unto  flesh,  more  as  heart  unto  heart : 


52  ANNE    SPENCER 

I  may  challenge  God  when  we  meet  That  Day, 
And  He  dare  not  be  silent  or  send  me  away. 


LINES    TO   A    NASTURTIUM 

(A  lover  muses) 

Flame-flower,  Day-torch,  Mauna  Loa, 
I  saw  a  daring  bee,  today,  pause,  and  soar, 

Into  your  flaming  heart ; 
Then  did  I  hear  crisp,  crinkled  laughter 
As  the  furies  after  tore  him  apart? 

A  bird,  next,  small  and  humming, 

Looked  into  your  startled  depths  and  fled 

Surely,  some  dread  sight,  and  dafter 

Than  human  eyes  as  mine  can  see, 
Set  the  stricken  air  waves  drumming 

In  his  flight. 


Day-torch,  Flame-flower,  cool-hot  Beauty, 

I  cannot  see,  I  cannot  hear  your  flutey 

Voice  lure  your  loving  swain, 

But  I  know  one  other  to  whom  you  are  in  beauty 

Born  in  vain : 

Hair  like  the  setting  sun, 

Her  eyes  a  rising  star, 

Motions  gracious  as  reeds  by  Babylon,  bar 

All  your  competing; 

Hands  like,  how  like,  brown  lilies  sweet, 

Cloth  of  gold  were  fair  enough  to  touch  her  feet 


ANNE    SPENCER  53 

Ah,  how  the  sense  floods  at  my  repeating, 
As  once  in  her  fire-lit  heart  I  felt  the  furies 
Beating,  beating. 


AT    THE    CARNIVAL 

Gay  little  Girl-of-the-Diving-Tank, 

I  desire  a  name  for  you, 

Nice,  as  a  right  glove  fits ; 

For  you — who  amid  the  malodorous 

Mechanics  of  this  unlovely  thing, 

Are  darling  of  spirit  and  form. 

I  know  you — a  glance,  and  what  you  are 

Sits-by-the-fire  in  my  heart. 

My  Limousine-Lady  knows  you,  or 

Why  does  the  slant-envy  of  her  eye  mark 

Your  straight  air  and  radiant  inclusive  smile? 

Guilt  pins  a  fig-leaf;  Innocence  is  its  own  adorning. 

The  bull-necked  man  knows  you — this  first  time 

His  itching  flesh  sees  form  divine  and  vibrant  health, 

And  thinks  not  of  his  avocation. 

I  came  incuriously — 

Set  on  no  diversion  save  that  my  mind 

Might  safely  nurse  its  brood  of  misdeeds 

In  the  presence  of  a  blind  crowd. 

The  color  of  life  was  gray. 

Everywhere  the  setting  seemed  right 

For  my  mood! 

Here  the  sausage  and  garlic  booth 


54  ANNE    SPENCER 

Sent  unholy  incense  skyward; 

There  a  quivering  female-thing 

Gestured  assignations,  and  lied 

To  call  it  dancing; 

There,  too,  were  games  of  chance 

With  chances  for  none; 

But  oh !  the  Girl-of-the-Tank,  at  last ! 

Gleaming  Girl,  how  intimately  pure  and  free 

The  gaze  you  send  the  crowd, 

As  though  you  know  the  dearth  of  beauty 

In  its  sordid  life. 

We  need  you — my  Limousine-Lady, 

The  bull-necked  man,  and  I. 

Seeing  you  here  brave  and  water-clean, 

Leaven  for  the  heavy  ones  of  earth, 

I  am  swift  to  feel  that  what  makes 

The  plodder  glad  is  good ;  and 

Whatever  is  good  is  God. 

The  wonder  is  that  you  are  here ; 

I  have  seen  the  queer  in  queer  places, 

But  never  before  a  heaven-fed 

Naiad  of  the  Carnival-Tank ! 

Little  Diver,  Destiny  for  you, 

Like  as  for  me,  is  shod  in  silence; 

Years  may  seep  into  your  soul 

The  bacilli  of  the  usual  and  the  expedient ; 

I  implore  Neptune  to  claim  his  child  to-day ! 


MARY    EFFIE    LEE    NEWSOME  55 

MARY    EFFIE     LEE     NEWSOME 

Born  in  Philadelphia  January  19,  1885.  Daughter  of 
Bishop  B.  F.  and  Mrs.  Mary  Elizabeth  Lee.  Reared  in 
Ohio,  at  Wilberforce.  Married  1920,  Rev.  Henry  Nesby 
Newsome.  Is  a  lover  of  the  out-of-doors,  and  of  the 
beautiful. 

MORNING  LIGHT1 
(The  Dew-Drier) 

Brother  to  the  firefly — 

For  as  the  firefly  lights  the  night, 

So  lights  he  the  morning — 

Bathed  in  the  dank  dews  as  he  goes  forth 

Through  heavy  menace  and  mystery 

Of  half-waking  tropic  dawn, 

Behold  a  little  boy, 

A  naked  black  boy, 

Sweeping  aside  with  his  slight  frame 

Night's  pregnant  tears, 

And  making  a  morning  path  to  the  light 

For  the  tropic  traveler ! 


Bathed  in  the  blood  of  battle, 
Treading  toward  a  new  morning, 

1  (This  poem,  published  in  the  CRISIS  during  the  World  War,  was  written  after  reading 
an  account  of  the  little  African  babies  who  are  sent  before  the  explorer  into  jungle  grasses 
that  tower  many  feet.  The  little  boys,  Dan  Crawford  says  in  his  THINKING  BLACK, 
who  go  out  to  tread  down  a  path  and  by  chance  meet  the  lurking  leopard  or  hyena  are 
"Human  Brooms,"  and  are  called  DEW-DRIERS.) 


56  MARY    EFFIE    LEE    NEWSOME 

May  not  his  race — 

Its  body  long  bared  to  the  world's  disdain, 

Its  face  schooled  to  smile  for  a  light  to  come — 

May  not  his  race,  even  as  the  Dew  Boy  leads, 

Bear  onward  the  world  to  a  time 

When  tolerance,  forbearance, 

Such  as  reigned  in  the  heart  of  ONE 

Whose  heart  was  gold 

Shall  shape  the  world  for  that  fresh  dawning 

After  the  dews  of  blood? 


PANSY 

Oh,  the  blue  blue  bloom 

On  the  velvet  cheek 

Of  the  little  pansy's  face 

That  hides  away  so  still  and  cool 

In  some  soft  garden  place! 

The  tiger  lily's  orange  fires, 

The  red  lights  from  the  rose 

Aren't  like  the  gloom  on  that  blue  cheek 

Of  the  softest  flower  that  grows ! 


SASSAFRAS    TEA 

The  sassafras  tea  is  red  and  clear 
In  my  white  china  cup, 


MARY    EFFIE    LEE    NEWSOME  57 

So  pretty  I  keep  peeping  in 
Before  I  drink  it  up. 

I  stir  it  with  a  silver  spoon, 
And  sometimes  I  j  ust  hold 
A  little  tea  inside  the  spoon, 
Like  it  was  lined  with  gold. 

It  makes  me  hungry  just  to  smell 
The  nice  hot  sass'fras  tea, 
And  that's  one  thing  I  really  like 
That  they  say's  good  for  me. 


SKY    PICTURES 

Sometimes  a  right  white  mountain 

Or  great  soft  polar  bear, 

Or  lazy  little  flocks  of  sheep 

Move  on  in  the  blue  air. 

The  mountains  tear  themselves  like  floss, 

The  bears  all  melt  away. 

The  little  sheep  will  drift  apart 

In  such  a  sudden  way. 

And  then  new  sheep  and  mountains  come. 

New  polar  bears  appear 

And  roll  and  tumble  on  again 

Up  in  the  skies  so  clear. 

The  polar  bears  would  like  to  get 

Where  polar  bears  belong. 


58  MARY    EFFIE    LEE    NEWSOME 

The  mountains  try  so  hard  to  stand 
In  one  place  firm  and  strong. 
The  little  sheep  all  want  to  stop 
And  pasture  in  the  sky, 
But  never  can  these  things  be  done, 
Although  they  try  and  try ! 


THE    QUILT 

I  have  the  greatest  fun  at  night, 
When  casement  windows  are  all  bright. 
I  make  believe  each  one's  a  square 
Of  some  great  quilt  up  in  the  air. 

The  blocks  of  gold  have  black  between, 

Wherever  only  night  is  seen. 

It  surely  makes  a  mammoth  quilt — 

With  bits  of  dark  and  checks  of  gilt — 

To  cover  up  the  tired  day 

In  such  a  cozy  sort  of  way. 


THE    BAKER'S    BOY 

The  baker's  boy  delivers  loaves 

All  up  and  down  our  street. 

His  car  is  white,  his  clothes  are  white, 

White  to  his  very  feet. 

I  wonder  if  he  stays  that  way. 


MARY    EFFIE    LEE    NEWSOME  59 

I  don't  see  how  he  does  all  day. 

I'd  like  to  watch  him  going  home 

When  all  the  loaves   are  out. 

His  clothes  must  look  quite  different  then, 

At  least  I  have  no  doubt. 


WILD   ROSES 

What!  Roses  growing  in  a  meadow 
Where  all  the  cattle  browse? 
I'd  think  they'd  fear  the  very  shadow 
Of  daddy's  big  rough  cows. 


QUOITS 

In  wintertime  I  have  such  fun 
When  I  play  quoits  with  father. 
I  beat  him  almost  every  game. 
He  never  seems  to  bother. 

He  looks  at  mother  and  just  smiles. 
All  this  seems  strange  to  me, 
For  when  he  plays  with  grown-up  folks, 
He  beats  them  easily. 


60  JOHN    FREDERICK    MATHEU8 

JOHN     FREDERICK     MATHEUS 

"I  was  born  September  10,  1887,  in  Keyser,  West  Vir- 
ginia. My  early  education  was  received  in  Steubenville, 
Ohio,  my  mother's  home.  I  was  graduated  from  High 
School  in  1905.  For  one  year  thereafter  I  was  bookkeeper 
and  helper  in  a  plumbing  shop. 

Proceeding  to  Cleveland,  Ohio,  I  entered  Adelbert  Col- 
lege of  Western  Reserve  University.  In  1910  I  won  the 
A.B.  degree  cum  laude  and  a  wife. 

I  lived  for  a  time  in  Philadelphia  then  began  service 
in  the  Florida  Agricultural  and  Mechanical  College  at 
Tallahassee,  as  teacher,  first  of  Mathematics,  then  of  Latin 
and  English.  Later  I  became  Professor  of  Romance 
Languages.  During  the  war  and  after,  I  served  as  the 
college  auditor  and  secretary. 

In  1921  I  received  the  M.A.  Degree  from  Columbia  Uni- 
versity and  the  Teachers  College  Diploma  as  teacher  of 
French.  In  1922  I  became  professor  of  Romance  Lan- 
guages in  the  West  Virginia  Collegiate  Institute,  Insti- 
tute, West  Virginia. 

In  1924  I  traveled  in  Cuba;  in  1925  I  studied  at  the 
University  of  Paris  during  the  summer  and  toured  Swit- 
zerland, Italy  and  southern  France. 

My  interest  in  letters  began  early  in  grammar  school 
days.  The  daily  papers  of  my  home  town  used  to  print 
my  puerile  efforts  when  copy  ran  low. 

Recently  I  have  been  the  recipient  of  prizes  and  men- 
tion in  the  three  annual  Opportunity  Literary  Contests 
and  in  the  1926  Crisis  contest,  for  short  stories,  personal 
sketches,  a  play  and  poems.  The  1925  Opportunity  prize 
story  'Fog'  is  published  in  the  New  Negro,  edited  by 
Alain  Locke." 


JOHN    FREDERICK    MATHEUS  61 

REQUIEM 

She  wears,  my  beloved,  a  rose  upon  her  head. 
Walk  softly  angels,  lest  your  gentle  tread 
Awake  her  to  the  turmoil  and  the  strife, 
The  dissonance  and  hates  called  life. 

She  sleeps,  my  beloved,  a  rose  upon  her  head. 
Who  says  she  will  not  hear,  that  she  is  dead? 
The  rose  will  fade  and  lose  its  lovely  hue, 
But  not,  my  beloved,  will  fading  wither  you. 

FENTON     JOHNSON 

"I  came  into  the  world  May  7,  1888.  No  notice  was 
taken  of  the  event  save  in  immediate  circles.  I  presume 
the  world  was  too  busy  or  preoccupied  to  note  it.  It  hap- 
pened in  Chicago.  I  went  to  school  and  also  college.  My 
scholastic  record  never  attained  me  any  notoriety. 

Taught  school  one  year  and  repented.  Having  scribbled 
since  the  age  of  nine,  had  some  plays  produced  on  the 
stage  of  the  old  Pekin  Theatre,  Chicago,  at  the  time  I 
was  nineteen.  When  I  was  twenty-four  my  first  volume 
A  Little  Dreaming  was  published.  Since  then  Visions  of 
the  Dusk  (1915)  and  Songs  of  the  Soil  (1916)  represent 
my  own  collections  of  my  work.  Also  published  a  volume 
of  short  stories  Tales  of  Darkest  America  and  a  group 
of  essays  on  American  politics  For  the  Highest  Good. 
Work  in  poetry  appears  in  the  following  anthologies :  The 
New  Poetry  (Monroe  and  Henderson),  Victory  (Braith- 
waite),  Others  (Kreymborg),  The  Chicago  Anthology 
(Blanden),  Anthology  of  Magazine  Verse   (Braithwaite), 


62  FENTONJOIUNTSON 

Poetry  by  American  Negroes  (White  and  Jackson),  Negro 
Poets  and  their  Poetry  (Kerlin),  Poets  of  America 
(Wood),  Book  of  American  Negro  Poetry  (J.  W.  John- 
son), Today's  Poetry   (Crawford  and  O'Neil)  and  others. 

Edited  two  or  three  magazines  and  published  one  or 
two  of  them  myself. 

My  complete  autobiography  I  promise  to  the  world  when 
I  am  able  to  realize  that  I  have  done  something." 


WHEN    I    DIE 

When  I  die  my  song  shall  be 
Crooning  of  the  summer  breeze; 
When  I  die  my  shroud  shall  be 
Leaves  plucked  from  the  maple  trees ; 
On  a  couch  as  green  as  moss 
And  a  bed  as  soft  as  down, 
I  shall  sleep  and  dream  my  dream 
Of  a  poet's  laurel  crown. 

When  I  die  my  star  shall  drop 
Singing  like  a  nightingale; 
When  I  die  my  soul  shall  rise 
Where  the  lyre-strings  never  fail ; 
In  the  rose  my  blood  shall  lie, 
In  the  violet  the  smile, 
And  the  moonbeams  thousand  strong 
Past  my  grave  each  night  shall  file. 


FENTON    JOHNSON  63 

PUCK    GOES    TO    COURT 

I  went  to  court  last  night, 
Before  me  firefly  light ; 
And  there  was  Lady  Mab, 
On  cheek  a  cunning  dab 
Of  rouge  the  sun  sent  down, 
King  Oberon  with  crown 
Of  gold  eyed  daisy  buds 
Among  potato  spuds 
Was  dancing  roundelay 
With  Lady  Chloe  and  May. 

I  hid  among  the  flowers 

And  spent  the  wee  young  hours 

In  mixing  up  the  punch ; 

For  I  was  on  a  hunch 

That  sober  men  are  dull 

And  fairy  dust  will  lull 

To  rest  the  plodding  mind 

Worn  down  by  life's  thick  grind. 

The  nobles  drank  the  brew 
And  called  it  sweetest  dew; 
But  when  I  left  they  lay 
Stunned  by  the  light  of  day 
And  Oberon  had  writ 
Decree  that  I  must  flit 
A  hundred  leagues  from  court. 
(Alas!    Where  is  there  sport?) 


64  FENTON    JOHNSON 

THE    MARATHON    RUNNER 

If  I  have  run  my  course  and  seek  the  pearls 

My  Psyche  fain  would  drink  at  Mermelon 

And  rest  content  in  wine  and  nectar  cup 

Who  knows  but  that  the  gods  have  found  me  whole 

And  in  their  stewardship  of  man  would  bless 

The  sweating  lover  fickle  man  once  knew? 

I  know  that  I  might  pull  the  tendon  bands 
That  hold  my  soul  together — ay,  might  bend 
Each  nerve  and  muscle  spirit  fain  would  keep — 
That  I  might  hear  the  maddening  cheers  of  men 
Who  when  the  morrow  dawns  forget  the  games 
And  cast  instead  the  dice  in  market  place. 

But  I  have  found  sweeter  peace  than  fame ; 
And  in  the  evening  dwell  on  heights  divine, 
Betwixt  my  lips  a  rose  from  Cupid's  hands, 
Upon  my  brow  the  laurel  Belvidere 
Entwines  from  tree  beside  the  throne  of  Zeus 
And  flowing  from  my  speech  Athene's  words 
Dipped  long  in  wisdom's  fount  to  heal  the  soul. 


JESSIE     FAUSET 

"Philadelphia  where  I  was  born  and  educated  was  once 
the  dear  delight  of  my  heart.  But  everything  in  my  life 
has  contrived  to  pull  me  away  from  it.     First  I  travelled 


JESSIE    FAUSET  65 

to  Cornell  University  and  came  back  with  a  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  key  and  a  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Arts.  That 
launched  me.  Since  then  I've  seen  England,  Scotland, 
France,  Belgium,  Switzerland,  Italy,  Austria  and  Algeria. 
The  College  de  France  and  the  Alliance  Francaise  have 
given  me  some  points  on  the  difference  between  the  French 
of  Stratford-atte-Bowe  and  that  of  Paris.  And  there  was 
a  pleasant  year  too  at  the  University  of  Pennsylvania  when 
I  renewed  my  acquaintance  with  Philadelphia  and  earned 
a  Master's  Degree.  So  much  for  education.  As  to  occu- 
pations I've  taught  Latin  and  French  in  the  Dunbar  High 
School  in  Washington,  D.  C.  And  served  as  Literary 
Editor  on  the  Crisis  in  New  York. 

Wonderful  days  those!  Now  I'm  teaching  French  again 
in  the  City  of  New  York  which  at  present  claims  my  love 
and  allegiance.  Like  the  French  I  am  fond  of  dancing, 
and  adore  cards  and  the  theatre  probably  because  I  am  a 
minister's  daughter.  All  my  life  I  have  wanted  to  write 
novels  and  have  had  one  published.  But  usually,  in  spite 
of  myself,  I  have  scribbled  poetry.  ...  I  should  like  to 
see  the  West  Indies,  South  America  and  Tunis  and  live  a 
long  time  on  the  French  Riviera.  Aside  from  this  I  have 
few  desires.     And  I  find  life  perpetually  enchanting." 


WORDS!     WORDS! 

How  did  it  happen  that  we  quarreled  ? 

We  two  who  loved  each  other  so ! 

Only  the  moment  before  we  were  one, 

Using  the  language  that  lovers  know. 

And  then  of  a  sudden,  a  word,  a  phrase 

That  struck  at  the  heart  like  a  poignard's  blow. 

And  you  went  berserk,  and  I  saw  red, 


JESSIE    FA  USET 

And  love  lay  between  us,  bleeding  and  dead ! 
Dead !  When  we'd  loved  each  other  so ! 

How  could  it  happen  that  we  quarreled ! 

Think  of  the  things  we  used  to  say ! 

"What  does  it  matter,  dear,  what  you  do? 

Love  such  as  ours  has  to  last  for  aye !" 

— "Try  me !    I  long  to  endure  your  test !" 

— "Love,  we  shall  always  love,  come  what  may !" 

What  are  the  words  the  apostle  saith? 

"In  the  power  of  the  tongue  are  Life  and  Death !" 

Think  of  the  things  we  used  to  say ! 


TOUCHE 

Dear,  when  we  sit  in  that  high,  placid  room, 
"Loving"  and  "doving"  as  all  lovers  do, 
Laughing  and  leaning  so  close  in  the  gloom, — 

What  is  the  change  that  creeps  sharp  over  you? 
Just  as  you  raise  your  fine  hand  to  my  hair, 
Bringing  that  glance  of  mixed  wonder  and  rue? 

"Black  hair,"  you  murmur,  "so  lustrous  and  rare, 
Beautiful  too,  like  a  raven's  smooth  wing; 
Surely  no  gold  locks  were  ever  more  fair." 

Why  do  you  say  every  night  that  same  thing? 
Turning  your  mind  to  some  old  constant  theme, 
Half  meditating  and  half  murmuring? 


JESSIE    FAUSET  67 

Tell  me,  that  girl  of  your  young  manhood's  dream, 
Her  you  loved  first  in  that  dim  long  ago — 
Had  she  blue  eyes?    Did  her  hair  goldly  gleam? 

Does  she  come  back  to  you  softly  and  slow, 
Stepping  wraith-wise  from  the  depths  of  the  past? 
Quickened  and  fired  by  the  warmth  of  our  glow? 

There  I've  divined  it !    My  wit  holds  you  fast. 
Nay,  no  excuses ;  'tis  little  I  care. 
I  knew  a  lad  in  my  own  girlhood's  past, — 
Blue  eyes  he  had  and  such  waving  gold  hair ! 


NOBLESSE    OBLIGE 

Lolotte,  who  attires  my  hair, 
Lost  her  lover.    Lolotte  weeps ; 
Trails  her  hand  before  her  eyes ; 
Hangs  her  head  and  mopes  and  sighs, 
Mutters  of  the  pangs  of  hell. 
Fills  the  circumambient  air 
With  her  plaints  and  her  despair. 
Looks  at  me: 

"May  you  never  know,  Mam'selle, 
Love's  harsh  cruelty." 

Love's  dart  lurks  in  my  heart  too, — 
None  may  know  the  smart 
Throbbing  underneath  my  smile. 


68  JESSIE    FAUSET 

Burning,  pricking  all  the  while 
That  I  dance  and  sing  and  spar, 
Juggling  words  and  making  quips 
To  hide  the  trembling  of  my  lips. 
I  must  laugh 

What  time  I  moan  to  moon  and  star 
To  help  me  stand  the  gaff. 

What  a  silly  thing  is  pride ! 
Lolotte  bares  her  heart. 
Heedless  that  each  runner  reads 
All  her  thoughts  and  all  her  needs. 
What  I  hide  with  my  soul's  life 
Lolotte  tells  with  tear  and  cry. 
Blurs  her  pain  with  sob  and  sigh. 
Happy  Lolotte,  she ! 
I  must  jest  while  sorrow's  knife 
Stabs  in  ecstasy. 

"If  I  live,  I  shall  outlive." 
Meanwhile  I  am  barred 
From  expression  of  my  pain. 
Let  my  heart  be  torn  in  twain, 
Only  I  may  know  the  truth. 
Happy  Lolotte,  blessed  she 
Who  may  tell  her  agony ! 
On  me  a  seal  is  set. 
Love  is  lost,  and — bitter  ruth — 
Pride  is  with  me  yet ! 


JESSIE    FAUSET 

LA    VIE    C'EST   LA    VIE 

On  summer  afternoons  I  sit 
Quiescent  by  you  in  the  park, 
And  idly  watch  the  sunbeams  gild 
And  tint  the  ash-trees'  bark. 

Or  else  I  watch  the  squirrels  frisk 
And  chaffer  in  the  grassy  lane ; 
And  all  the  while  I  mark  your  voice 
Breaking  with  love  and  pain. 

I  know  a  woman  who  would  give 
Her  chance  of  heaven  to  take  my  place ; 
To  see  the  love-light  in  your  eyes, 
The  love-glow  on  your  face ! 

And  there's  a  man  whose  lightest  word 
Can  set  my  chilly  blood  afire ; 
Fulfilment  of  his  least  behest 
Defines  my  life's  desire. 

But  he  will  none  of  me.     Nor  I 
Of  you.    Nor  you  of  her.    'Tis  said 
The  world  is  full  of  jests  like  these. — 
I  wish  that  I  were  dead. 


70  JESSIE    FAUSET 

THE    RETURN 

I  that  had  found  the  way  so  smooth 
With  gilly-flowers  that  beck  and  nod, 
Now  find  that  same  road  wild  and  steep 
With  need  for  compass  and  for  rod. 
And  yet  with  feet  that  bleed,  I  pant 
On  blindly, — stumbling  back  to  God ! 


RENCONTRE 

My  heart  that  was  so  passionless 
Leapt  high  last  night  when  I  saw  you ! 
Within  me  surged  the  grief  of  years 
And  whelmed  me  with  its  endless  rue. 
My  heart  that  slept  so  still,  so  spent, 
Awoke  last  night, — to  break  anew! 


FRAGMENT 

The  breath  of  life  imbued  those  few  dim  days ! 
Yet  all  we  had  was  this, — 
A  flashing  smile,  a  touch  of  hands,  and  once 
A  fleeting  kiss. 

Blank  futile  death  inheres  these  years  between ! 
Still  naught  have  you  and  I 


JESSIE    FAUSET  71 

But  frozen  tears,  and  stifled  words,  and  once 
A  sharp  caught  cry. 

ALICE     DUNBAR     NELSON 

Born  Alice  Ruth  Moore,  in  New  Orleans,  Louisiana. 
Educated  in  public  schools  and  Straight  College  in  New 
Orleans.  Afterwards  studied  at  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania, Cornell  University  and  School  of  Industrial  Art. 
Married  to  Paul  Laurence  Dunbar  in  1898.  Taught 
school  prior  to  marriage  in  New  Orleans,  and  Brooklyn. 
One  of  the  founders  of  the  White  Rose  Industrial  Home 
in  New  York,  and  the  Industrial  School  for  Colored  Girls 
in  Delaware.     At  present  teaching  in  Delaware. 

Published  Violets  and  Other  Tales,  The  Goodness  of 
St.  Rocque,  Masterpieces  of  Negro  Eloquence,  The  Dun- 
bar Speaker,  and  The  Negro  in  Louisiana.  Contributor 
to  magazines  and  newspapers,  as  short  story  writer  and 
columnist. 

Married  to  Robert  John  Nelson,  1916. 

SNOW    IN   OCTOBER 

Today  I  saw  a  thing  of  arresting  poignant  beauty: 

A  strong  young  tree,  brave  in  its  Autumn  finery 

Of  scarlet  and  burnt  umber  and  flame  yellow, 

Bending  beneath  a  weight  of  early  snow, 

Which  sheathed  the  north  side  of  its  slender  trunk, 

And  spread  a  heavy  white  chilly  afghan 

Over  its  crested  leaves. 


72  ALICE    DUNBAR    NELSON 

Yet  they  thrust  through,  defiant,  glowing, 
Claiming  the  right  to  live  another  fortnight, 
Clamoring  that  Indian  Summer  had  not  come, 
Crying  "Cheat !  Cheat !"  because  Winter  had  stretched 
Long  chill  fingers  into  the  brown,  streaming  hair 
Of  fleeing  October. 

The  film  of  snow  shrouded  the  proud  redness  of  the  tree, 
As  premature  grief  grays  the  strong  head 
Of  a  virile,  red-haired  man. 


SONNET 

I  had  no  thought  of  violets  of  late, 

The  wTild,  shy  kind  that  spring  beneath  your  feet 

In  wistful  April  days,  when  lovers  mate 

And  wander  through  the  fields  in  raptures  sweet. 

The  thought  of  violets  meant  florists'  shops, 

And  bows  and  pins,  and  perfumed  papers  fine; 

And  garish  lights,  and  mincing  little  fops 

And  cabarets  and  songs,  and  deadening  wine. 

So  far  from  sweet  real  things  my  thoughts  had  strayed,, 

I  had  forgot  wide  fields,  and  clear  brown  streams ; 

The  perfect  loveliness  that  God  has  made, — 

Wild  violets  shy  and  Heaven-mounting  dreams. 

And  now — unwittingly,  you've  made  me  dream 

Of  violets,  and  my  soul's  forgotten  gleam. 


ALICE    DUNBAR    NELSON  73 

I    SIT   AND    SEW 

I  sit  and  sew— a  useless  task  it  seems, 

My  hands  grown  tired,  my  head  weighed  down  with 

dreams — 
The  panoply  of  war,  the  martial  tread  of  men, 
Grim-faced,  stern-eyed,  gazing  beyond  the  ken 
Of  lesser  souls,  whose  eyes  have  not  seen  Death 
Nor  learned  to  hold  their  lives  but  as  a  breath — 
But — I  must  sit  and  sew. 

I  sit  and  sew — my  heart  aches  with  desire — 

That  pageant  terrible,  that  fiercely  pouring  fire 

On  wasted  fields,  and  writhing  grotesque  things 

Once  men.    My  soul  in  pity  flings 

Appealing  cries,  yearning  only  to  go 

There  in  that  holocaust  of  hell,  those  fields  of  woe — 

But — I  must  sit  and  sew. — 

The  little  useless  seam,  the  idle  patch ; 
Why  dream  I  here  beneath  my  homely  thatch, 
When  there  they  lie  in  sodden  mud  and  rain, 
Pitifully  calling  me,  the  quick  ones  and  the  slain  ? 
You  need  me,  Christ !    It  is  no  roseate  dream 
That  beckons  me — this  pretty  futile  seam, 
It  stifles  me — God,  must  I  sit  and  sew  ? 


74  GEORGIA     DOUGLAS    JOHNSON 

GEORGIA  DOUGLAS  JOHNSON 

Many  years  ago  a  little  yellow  girl  in  Atlanta,  Georgia, 
came  across  a  poem  in  a  current  paper  that  told  of  a  rose 
struggling  to  bloom  in  a  window  in  New  York  City.  A 
child  tended  this  flower  and  her  whole  life  was  wrapt  up 
in  its  fate.  This  poem  was  written  by  William  Stanley 
Braithwaite,  years  before  the  world  knew  how  marvellous 
was  his  mind.  Some  one  told  the  reader  of  these  lines 
that  the  writer  was  colored  and  straightway  she  began  to 
walk  upward  toward  him. 

This  little  girl  grew  up,  went  to  Atlanta  University, 
Oberlin  Conservatory,  taught  school,  then  married  Henry 
Lincoln  Johnson,  always  looking  forward  toward  the  light 
of  the  poet  Braithwaite. 

Then  her  husband  was  appointed  Recorder  of  Deeds 
under  Taft  and  she  was  moved  by  circumstances  to  the 
capital — Washington. 

Dean  Kelly  Miller  at  Howard  University  saw  some  of 
her  poetic  efforts  and  was  pleased.  Stanley  Braithwaite 
was  his  friend  and  he  directed  her  to  send  something  to 
him  at  Boston.  She  did  so,  and  then  began  a  quickening 
and  a  realization  that  she  could  do ! 

Following  this  happy  event,  Dr.  W.  E.  B.  Du  Bois  of 
the  Crisis  brought  out  two  poems  from  her  pen  that  awak- 
ened the  interest  of  readers. 

At  this  time  Jessie  Fauset,  the  novelist,  was  teaching 
French  in  Washington  and  very  generously  helped  her  to 
gather  together  material  for  her  first  book  The  Heart  of 
A  Woman  with  an  introduction  by  William  Stanley  Braith- 
waite. This  was  followed  by  Bronze,  a  book  of  color  with 
an  introduction  by  W.  E.  B.  Du  Bois.  Her  third  attempt 
in  poetry  was  An  Autumn  Love  Cycle  with  an  introduc- 
tion by  Alain  Locke,  the  editor  of  The  New  Negro. 

At  present  she   is   connected   with   the   Department   of 


GEORGIA    DOUGLAS    JOHNSON  75 

Labor  at  Washington,  as  Commissioner  of  Conciliation. 
At  her  home  there  you  may  find  the  young  writers  gathered 
together  almost  any  Saturday  night  exchanging  ideas,  re- 
citing new  poems  or  discussing  plans  for  new  creations. 


SERVICE 

When  we  count  out  our  gold  at  the  end  of  the  day, 
And  have  filtered  the  dross  that  has  cumbered  the  way, 
Oh,  what  were  the  hold  of  our  treasury  then 
Save  the  love  we  have  shown  to  the  children  of  men? 


HOPE 

Frail  children  of  sorrow,  dethroned  by  a  hue, 
The  shadows  are  necked  by  the  rose  sifting  through, 
The  world  has  its  motion,  all  things  pass  away, 
No  night  is  omnipotent,  there  must  be  day. 

The  oak  tarries  long  in  the  depth  of  the  seed, 
But  swift  is  the  season  of  nettle  and  weed, 
Abide  yet  awhile  in  the  mellowing  shade, 
And  rise  with  the  hour  for  which  you  were  made. 

The  cycle  of  seasons,  the  tidals  of  man 
Revolve  in  the  orb  of  an  infinite  plan, 
We  move  to  the  rhythm  of  ages  long  done, 
And  each  has  his  hour — to  dwell  in  the  sun ! 


76  GEORGIA    DOUGLAS    JOHNSON 

THE    SUPPLIANT 

Long  have  I  beat  with  timid  hands  upon  life's  leaden 

door, 
Praying  the  patient,  futile  prayer  my  fathers  prayed 

before, 
Yet  I  remain  without  the  close,  unheeded  and  unheard, 
And  never  to  my  listening  ear  is  borne  the  waited  word. 

Soft  o'er  the  threshold  of  the  years  there  comes  this 

counsel  cool : 
The  strong  demand,  contend,  prevail;  the  beggar  is  a 

fool! 


LITTLE    SON 

The  very  acme  of  my  woe, 

The  pivot  of  my  pride, 
My  consolation,  and  my  hope 

Deferred,  but  not  denied. 
The  substance  of  my  every  dream, 

The  riddle  of  my  plight, 
The  very  world  epitomized 

In  turmoil  and  delight. 


GEORGIA    DOUGLAS    JOHNSON  77 

OLD    BLACK    MEN 

They  have  dreamed  as  young  men  dream 

Of  glory,  love  and  power ; 
They  have  hoped  as  youth  will  hope 

Of  life's  sun-minted  hour. 

They  have  seen  as  others  saw 

Their  bubbles  burst  in  air, 
And  they  have  learned  to  live  it  down 

As  though  they  did  not  care. 

LETHE 

I  do  not  ask  for  love,  ah !  no, 

Nor  friendship's  happiness, 
These  were  relinquished  long  ago ; 

I  search  for  something  less. 

I  seek  a  little  tranquil  bark 

In  which  to  drift  at  ease 
Awhile,  and  then  quite  silently 

To  sink  in  quiet  seas. 

PROVING 

Were  you  a  leper  bathed  in  wounds 
And  by  the  world  denied ; 


78      GEORGIA  DOUGLAS  JOHNSON 

I'd  share  your  fatal  exile 
As  a  privilege  and  pride. 

You  are  to  me  the  sun,  the  moon, 
The  starlight  of  my  soul, 

The  sounding  motif  of  my  heart, 
The  impetus  and  goal ! 


I    WANT    TO   DIE    WHILE    YOU 
LOVE    ME 

I  want  to  die  while  you  love  me, 
While  yet  you  hold  me  fair, 

While  laughter  lies  upon  my  lips 
And  lights  are  in  my  hair. 

I  want  to  die  while  you  love  me 

And  bear  to  that  still  bed 
Your  kisses  turbulent,  unspent 

To  warm  me  when  I'm  dead. 

I  want  to  die  while  you  love  me ; 

Oh,  who  would  care  to  live 
Till  love  has  nothing  more  to  ask 

And  nothing  more  to  give? 

I  want  to  die  while  you  love  me, 

And  never,  never  see 
The  glory  of  this  perfect  day 

Grow  dim,  or  cease  to  be ! 


GEORGIA    DOUGLAS    JOHNSON  79 

RECESSIONAL 

Consider  me  a  memory,  a  dream  that  passed  away ; 
Or  yet  a  flower  that  has  blown  and  shattered  in  a  day ; 
For  passion  sleeps  alas  and  keeps  no  vigil  with  the  years 
And  wakens  to  no  conjuring  of  orisons  or  tears. 

Consider  me  a  melody  that  served  its  simple  turn, 
Or  but  the  residue  of  fire  that  settles  in  the  urn, 
For  love  defies  pure  reasoning  and  undeterred  flows 
Within,  without,  the  vassal  heart — its  reasoning  who 
knows  ? 


MY   LITTLE    DREAMS 

I'm  folding  up  my  little  dreams 

Within  my  heart  tonight, 
And  praying  I  may  soon  forget 

The  torture  of  their  sight. 

For  time's  deft  fingers  scroll  my  brow 

With  fell  relentless  art — 
I'm  folding  up  my  little  dreams 

Tonight,  within  my  heart. 


80  GEORGIA    DOUGLAS    JOHNSON 

WHAT    NEED    HAVE    I    FOR 
MEMORY  ? 

What  need  have  I  for  memory, 
When  not  a  single  flower 

Has  bloomed  within  life's  desert 
For  me,  one  little  hour? 

What  need  have  I  for  memory 
Whose  burning  eyes  have  met 

The  corse  of  unborn  happiness 
Winding  the  trail  regret  ? 


WHEN     I    AM     DEAD 

When  I   am  dead,  withhold,  I  pray,  your  blooming 

legacy ; 
Beneath  the  willows  did  I  bide,  and  they  should  cover 

me; 
I  longed  for  light  and  fragrance,  and  I  sought  them  far 

and  near, 
O,  it  would  grieve  me  utterly,  to  find  them  on  my  bier ! 


THE  DREAMS  OF  THE  DREAMER 

The  dreams  of  the  dreamer 
Are  life-drops  that  pass 


GEORGIA    DOUGLAS    JOHNSON  81 

The  break  in  the  heart 
To  the  soul's  hour-glass. 

The  songs  of  the  singer 

Are  tones  that  repeat 
The  cry  of  the  heart 

Till  it  ceases  to  beat. 


THE  HEART  OF  A  WOMAN 

The  heart  of  a  woman  goes  forth  with  the  dawn, 
As  a  lone  bird,  soft  winging,  so  restlessly  on, 
Afar  o'er  life's  turrets  and  vales  does  it  roam 
In  the  wake  of  those  echoes  the  heart  calls  home. 

The  heart  of  a  woman  falls  back  with  the  night, 
And  enters  some  alien  cage  in  its  plight, 
And  tries  to  forget  it  has  dreamed  of  the  stars 
While  it  breaks,  breaks,  breaks  on  the  sheltering  bars. 


CLAUDE  McKAY 


"I  was  born  in  a  very  little  village  high  up  in  the 
hills  of  the  parish  of  Clarendon  in  the  island  of  Jamaica. 
The  village  was  so  small  it  hadn't  a  name  like  the  larger 


82  CLAUDE    MCKAY 

surrounding   villages.      But    our    place   was    called    Sunny 
Ville.     I  was  the  youngest  of  eleven. 

My  father  was  a  peasant  proprietor  who  owned  his  land 
and  cultivated  large  tracts  of  coffee,  cocoa,  bananas  and 
sugar-cane.  When  I  was  of  school  age  I  was  sent  to  my 
brother  who  was  a  schoolmaster  in  a  small  town  in  the 
North-Western  part  of  the  island.  He  educated  me.  He 
was  a  free-thinker  and  I  became  one,  too,  so  soon  as  I 
could  think  about  life  and  religion.  I  was  never  a  child 
of  any  church.  My  brother  had  a  nice  library  with  books 
of  all  sorts  and  I  read  such  free-thought  writers  as 
Haeckel,  Huxley,  Matthew  Arnold,  side  by  side  with 
Shakespeare  and  the  great  English  novelists  and  poets 
(excepting  Browning)  before  I  was  fourteen.  At  that 
time  Shakespeare  to  me  was  only  a  wonderful  story-teller. 
When  I  was  seventeen  I  won  a  Jamaica  Government  Trade 
Scholarship  and  was  apprenticed  to  a  cabinet-maker  and 
wheelwright.  I  hated  trade  and  quit.  When  I  was  nine- 
teen I  joined  the  Jamaica  Constabulary  and  left  it  after 
ten  months.  An  English  gentleman  who  was  collecting 
Jamaica  folklore  became  interested  in  my  dialect  verses 
and  helped  me  to  publish  my  first  book :  Songs  of  Jamaica, 
in  1911.  I  was  twenty  years  old  then.  The  next  year 
I  went  to  the  United  States.  First  to  an  educational  insti- 
tution for  Negroes  in  the  South.  I  did  not  like  it,  and 
left  there  after  three  months  for  a  college  in  a  Western 
state.  There  I  stayed  two  years.  Came  to  New  York. 
Abandoned  all  thought  of  returning  to  the  West  Indies. 
Lost  a  few  thousand  dollars  (a  legacy)  in  high  living  and 
bad  business.  Went  to  work  at  various  jobs,  porter, 
houseman,  longshoreman,  bar-man,  railroad  club  and  hotel 
waiter.  Kept  on  writing.  The  Seven  Arts  Magazine  took 
two  of  my  poems  in  1917.  In  1918  Frank  Harris  pub- 
lished some  poems  in  Pearson's.  In  1919  The  Liberator 
published  some  things.  The  same  year  I  went  to  Holland, 
Belgium   and   England.      Lived   in   London   over   a   year. 


CLAUDE    MC  KAY  83 

Published  Spring  in  New  Hampshire.  Returned  to  Amer- 
ica in  1921.  Got  a  job  with  Max  Eastman  on  the  Libera- 
tor. Kept  it  till  Max  Eastman  left  for  Europe.  Went 
to  Russia  in  1922.  Harlem  Shadows  published  1922  by 
Harcourt,  Brace  &  Co.  Stayed  six  months  in  Moscow  and 
Petrograd.  Berlin  in  1923.  Paris  at  the  end  of  1923, 
where  I  was  very  ill  for  months.  Been  in  France  ever 
since  trying  to  exist  and  write." 


AMERICA1 

Although  she  feeds  me  bread  of  bitterness, 

And  sinks  into  my  throat  her  tiger's  tooth, 

Stealing  my  breath  of  life,  I  will  confess 

I  love  this  cultured  hell  that  tests  my  youth ! 

Her  vigor  flows  like  tides  into  my  blood, 

Giving  me  strength  erect  against  her  hate. 

Her  bigness  sweeps  my  being  like  a  flood. 

Yet  as  a  rebel  fronts  a  king  in  state, 

I  stand  within  her  walls  with  not  a  shred 

Of  terror,  malice,  not  a  word  of  jeer. 

Darkly  I  gaze  into  the  days  ahead, 

And  see  her  might  and  granite  wonders  there, 

Beneath  the  touch  of  Time's  unerring  hand, 

Like  priceless  treasures  sinking  in  the  sand. 

Claude  McKay 

1  From  "Harlem  Shadows"  by  Claude  McKay,  Copyright  1922,  by  Harcourt,  Brace  & 
Company,  Inc. 


84  CLAUDE    MCKAY 

EXHORTATION:    SUMMER,    19191 

Through  the  pregnant  universe  rumbles  life's  terrific 
thunder, 
And  Earth's  bowels  quake  with  terror ;  strange  and 
terrible  storms  break, 
Lightning-torches  flame  the  heavens,  kindling  souls  of 
men,  thereunder: 
Africa !  long  ages  sleeping,  O  my  motherland,  awake ! 

In  the  East  the  clouds  glow  crimson  with  the  new  dawn 
that  is  breaking, 
And  its  golden  glory  fills  the  western  skies. 
O  my  brothers  and  my  sisters,  wake!  arise! 
For  the  new  birth  rends  the  old  earth  and  the  very  dead 
are  waking, 
Ghosts   are  turned  flesh,  throwing   off   the   grave's 

disguise, 
And  the  foolish,  even  children,  are  made  wise ; 
For  the  big  earth  groans  in  travail  for  the  strong,  new 
world  in  making — 
O  my  brothers,  dreaming  for  dim  centuries, 
Wake  from  sleeping;  to  the  East  turn,  turn  your 
eyes! 

Oh  the  night  is  sweet  for  sleeping,  but  the  shining  day's 
for  working; 


1  From  "Harlem  Shadows"  by  Claude  McKay,  Copyright  1922,  by  Harcourt,  Brace  & 
Company,  Inc. 


CLAUDE    M  C  KAY  85 

Sons  of  the  seductive  night,  for  your  children's  chil- 
dren's sake, 
From  the  deep  primeval  forests  where  the  crouching 
leopard's  lurking, 

Lift  your  heavy-lidded  eyes,  Ethiopia !  awake ! 

In  the  East  the  clouds  glow  crimson  with  the  new  dawn 
that  is  breaking, 
And  its  golden  glory  fills  the  western  skies. 
O  my  brothers  and  my  sisters,  wake !  arise ! 
For  the  new  birth  rends  the  old  earth  and  the  very  dead 
are  waking, 
Ghosts   are  turned   flesh,  throwing   off  the   grave's 

disguise, 
And  the  foolish,  even  children,  are  made  wise ; 
For  the  big  earth  groans  in  travail  for  the  strong,  new 
world  in  making — 
O  my  brothers,  dreaming  for  long  centuries, 
Wake  from  sleeping;  to  the  East  turn,  turn  your 
eyes! 


FLAME-HEART1 

So  much  have  I  forgotten  in  ten  years, 
So  much  in  ten  brief  years !    I  have  forgot 

What  time  the  purple  apples  come  to  juice, 

And  what  month  brings  the  shy  forget-me-not. 

» From  "Harlem  Shadows"  by  Claude  McKay,  Copyright  1922,  by  Karcourt,  Brace  & 
Company,  Inc. 


86  CLAUDE    McKAY 

I  have  forgot  the  special,  startling  season 
Of  the  pimento's  flowering  and  fruiting ; 

What  time  of  year  the  ground  doves  brown  the  fields 
And  fill  the  noonday  with  their  curious  fluting. 

I  have  forgotten  much,  but  still  remember 

The  poinsettia's  red,  blood-red  in  warm  December. 

I  still  recall  the  honey-fever  grass, 

But  cannot  recollect  the  high  days  when 
We  rooted  them  out  of  the  ping-wing  path 

To  stop  the  mad  bees  in  the  rabbit  pen. 
I  often  try  to  think  in  what  sweet  month 

The  languid  painted  ladies  used  to  dapple 
The  yellow  by-road  mazing  from  the  main, 

Sweet  with  the  golden  threads  of  the  rose-apple. 
I  have  forgotten — strange — but  quite  remember 
The  poinsettia's  red,  blood-red  in  warm  December. 

What  weeks,  what  months,  what  time  of  the  mild  year 

We  cheated  school  to  have  our  fling  at  tops? 
What  days  our  wine-thrilled  bodies  pulsed  with  j  oy 

Feasting  upon  blackberries  in  the  copse? 
Oh,  some  I  know !  I  have  embalmed  the  days, 

Even  the  sacred  moments  when  we  played, 
All  innocent  of  passion,  uncorrupt, 

At  noon  and  evening  in  the  flame-heart's  shade. 
We  were  so  happy,  happy,  I  remember, 
Beneath  the  poinsettia's  red  in  warm  December. 


CLAUDE    MCKAY  87 

THE    WILD    GOAT1 

O  you  would  clothe  me  in  silken  frocks 

And  house  me  from  the  cold, 
And  bind  with  bright  bands  my  glossy  locks, 

And  buy  me  chains  of  gold. 

And  give  me — meekly  to  do  my  will — 

The  hapless  sons  of  men: — 
But  the  wild  goat  bounding  on  the  barren  hill 

Droops  in  the  grassy  pen. 

RUSSIAN   CATHEDRAL 

Bow  down  my  soul  in  worship  very  low 
And  in  the  holy  silences  be  lost. 
Bow  down  before  the  marble  man  of  woe, 
Bow  down  before  the  singing  angel  host. 
What  jewelled  glory  fills  my  spirit's  eye! 
What  golden  grandeur  moves  the  depths  of  me ! 
The  soaring  arches  lift  me  up  on  high 
Taking  my  breath  with  their  rare  symmetry. 

Bow  down  my  soul  and  let  the  wondrous  light 
Of  beauty  bathe  thee  from  her  lofty  throne, 

1From  "Harlem  Shadows"  by  Claude  McKay,  Copyright  1922,  by  Harcourt,  Brace 
&  Company,  Inc. 


CLAUDE    Mc  KAY 

Bow  down  before  the  wonder  of  man's  might. 
Bow  down  in  worship,  humble  and  alone; 
Bow  lowly  down  before  the  sacred  sight 
Of  man's  divinity  alive  in  stone. 


DESOLATE 

My  spirit  is  a  pestilential  city, 

With  misery  triumphant  everywhere, 

Glutted  with  baffled  hopes  and  lost  to  pity ; 

Strange  agonies  make  quiet  lodgment  there. 

Its  bursting  sewers  ooze  up  from  below, 

And  spread  their  loathsome  substance  through  its  lanes, 

Flooding  all  areas  with  their  evil  flow, 

And  blocking  all  the  motion  of  its  veins. 

Its  life  is  sealed  to  love  or  hope  or  pity ; 

My  spirit  is  a  pestilential  city. 

Above  its  walls  the  air  is  heavy-wet, 
Brooding  in  fever  mood  and  hanging  thick 
Round  empty  tower  and  broken  minaret, 
Settling  upon  the  tree-tops  stricken  sick 
And  withered  in  its  dank  contagious  breath ; 
Their  leaves  are  shrivelled  silver,  parched  decay, 
Like  wilting  creepers  trailing  underneath 
The  chalky  yellow  of  a  tropic  way. 
Hound  crumbling  tower  and  leaning  minaret, 
The  air  hangs  fever-filled  and  heavy-wet. 


CLAUDE    MCKAY  89 

And  all  its  many  fountains  no  more  spurt ; 
Within  the  dammed-up  tubes  they  tide  and  foam 
Around  the  drifting  sludge  and  silted  dirt, 
And  weep  against  the  soft  and  liquid  loam, 
And  so  the  city's  ways  are  washed  no  more; 
All  is  neglected  and  decayed  within. 
Clean  waters  beat  against  its  high-walled  shore 
In  furious  force,  but  cannot  enter  in. 
The  suffocated  fountains  cannot  spurt; 
They  foam  and  weep  against  the  silted  dirt. 

Beneath  the  ebon  gloom  of  mounting  rocks 
The  little  pools  lie  poisonously  still. 
And  birds  come  to  the  edge  in  forlorn  flocks, 
And  utter  sudden  plaintive  notes  and  shrill, 
Pecking  at  fatty  grey-green  substances ; 
But  never  do  they  dip  their  bills  and  drink. 
They  twitter  sad,  beneath  the  mournful  trees, 
And  fretfully  flit  to  and  from  the  brink, 
In  little  dull  brown,  green-and-purple  flocks, 
Beneath  the  jet-gloom  of  the  mounting  rocks. 

And  green-eyed  moths  of  curious  design, 

With  gold-black  wings  and  brightly  silver-dotted, 

On  nests  of  flowers  among  those  rocks  recline — 

Bold,  burning  blossoms,  strangely  leopard-spotted, 

But  breathing  deadly  poison  at  the  lips. 

Oh,  every  lovely  moth  that  wanders  by, 

And  on  the  blossoms  fatal  nectar  sips, 

Is  doomed  in  drooping  stupor  there  to  die — 


90  CLAUDE    MCKAY 

All  green-eyed  moths  of  curious  design 
That  on  the  fiercely-burning  rocks  recline. 


Oh  cold  as  death  is  all  the  loveliness 

That  breathes  out  of  the  strangeness  of  the  scene, 

And  sickening  like  a  skeleton's  caress, 

With  clammy  clinging  fingers,  long  and  lean. 

Above  it  float  a  host  of  yellow  flies, 

Circling  in  changeless  motion  in  their  place, 

Snow-thick  and  mucid  in  the  drooping  skies, 

Swarming  across  the  glassy  floor  of  space. 

Oh  cold  as  death  is  all  the  loveliness 

And  sickening  like  a  skeleton's  caress. 

There  was  a  time  when,  happy  with  the  birds, 

The  little  children  clapped  their  hands  and  laughed; 

And  midst  the  clouds  the  glad  winds  heard  their  words, 

And  blew  down  all  the  merry  ways  to  waft 

Their  music  to  the  scented  fields  of  flowers. 

Oh  sweet  were  children's  voices  in  those  days, 

Before  the  fall  of  pestilential  showers, 

That  drove  them  forth  from  all  the  city's  ways. 

Now  never,  never  more  their  silver  words 

Will  mingle  with  the  golden  of  the  birds. 

Gone,  gone  forever  the  familiar  forms 
To  which  my  spirit  once  so  dearly  clung, 
Blown  worlds  beyond  by  the  destroying  storms, 


CLAUDE    MCKAY  91 

And  lost  away  like  lovely  songs  unsung. 
Yet  life  still  lingers,  questioningly  strange, 
Timid  and  quivering,  naked  and  alone, 
Biding  the  cycle  of  disruptive  change, 
Though  all  the  fond  familiar  forms  are  gone 
Forever  gone,  the  fond  familiar  forms, 
Blown  worlds  beyond  by  the  destroying  storms. 


ABSENCE1 

Your  words  dropped  into  my  heart  like  pebbles  into  a 

pool, 
Rippling  around  my  breast  and  leaving  it  melting  cool. 

Your  kisses  fell  sharp  on  my  flesh  like  dawn-dews  from 

the  limb 
Of  a  fruit-filled  lemon  tree  when  the  day  is  young  and 

dim. 

Like  soft  rain-christened  sunshine,  as  fragile  as  rare 

gold  lace, 
Your  breath,  sweet-scented  and  warm,  has  kindled  my 

tranquil  face. 

But  a  silence  vasty-deep,  oh  deeper  than  all  these  ties 
Now,  through  the  menacing   miles,  brooding  between 
us  lies. 

*  From"  Harlem  Shadows   by  Claude  McKay,  Copyright  1922,  by  Harcourt,  Brace  & 
Company,  Inc. 


92  CLAUDE    MCKAY 

And  more  than  the  songs  I  sing,  I  await  your  written 

word, 
To  stir  my  fluent  blood  as  never  your  presence  stirred. 


MY    HOUSE 

For  this   peculiar  tint  that   paints   my  house 

Peculiar  in  an  alien  atmosphere 

Where  other  houses  wear  a  kindred  hue, 

I  have  a  stirring  always  very  rare 

And  romance-making  in  my  ardent  blood, 

That  channels  through  my  body  like  a  flood. 

I  know  the  dark  delight  of  being  strange, 
The  penalty  of  difference  in  the  crowd, 
The  loneliness  of  wisdom  among  fools, 
Yet  never  have  I  felt  but  very  proud, 
Though  I  have  suffered  agonies  of  hell, 
Of  living  in  my  own  peculiar  cell. 

There  is  an  exaltation  of  man's  life, 
His  hidden  life,  that  he  alone  can  feel. 
The  blended  fires  that  heat  his  veins  within, 
Shaping  his  metals  into  finest  steel, 
Are  elements  from  his  own  native  earth, 
That  the  wise  gods  bestowed  on  him  at  birth. 

Oh  each  man's  mind  contains  an  unknown  realm 
Walled  in  from  other  men  however  near, 


CLAUDE     MC  KAY 

And  unimagined  in  their  highest  flights 
Of  comprehension  or  of  vision  clear; 
A  realm  where  he  withdraws  to  contemplate 
Infinity  and  his  own  finite  state. 

Thence  he  may  sometimes  catch  a  god-like  glimpse 
Of  mysteries  that  seem  beyond  life's  bar; 
Thence  he  may  hurl  his  little  shaft  at  heaven 
And  bring  down  accidentally  a  star, 
And  drink  its  foamy  dust  like  sparkling  wine 
And  echo  accents  of  the  laugh  divine. 

Then  he  may  fall  into  a  drunken  sleep 
And  wake  up  in  his  same  house  painted  blue 
Or  .white  or  green  or  red  or  brown  or  black — 
His  house,  his  own,  whatever  be  the  hue. 
But  things  for  him  will  not  be  what  they  seem 
To  average  men  since  he  has  dreamt  his  dream ! 


JEAN     TOOMER 

Jean  Toomer  was  born  in  Washington,  D.  C,  in  1894. 
He  has  since  lived  there  and  in  New  York,  receiving  his 
education  mainly  in  these  cities.  Having  traveled  over  a 
good  part  of  America,  experiencing  varied  aspects  of  its 
life  and  studying  the  elements  of  contemporary  problems, 
in  1918  in  the  midst  of  a  general  interest  in  art,  he  grad- 
ually centered  on  that  of  literature.  There  followed  a 
four  year  period  devoted  entirely  to  writing,  the  results 
of  which  were  first  given  printed   form  by   The  Double 


94  JEAN    TOOMER 

Dealer  of  New  Orleans.  And  soon  thereafter,  sketches, 
poems,  short  stories,  and  critical  reviews  began  appearing 
in  Broom,  The  Crisis,  The  Dial,  The  Liberator,  The  Little 
Review,  Opportunity,  etc.  These  brought  him  in  contact 
with  a  literary  and  artistic  group  in  New  York  composed 
of  such  men  as  Waldo  Frank,  Alfred  Steiglitz,  Paul  Rosen- 
feld,  Gorham  B.  Munson,  and  others.  With  these  he  has 
been  associated  in  the  effort  to  articulate  the  diverse  sig- 
nificances of  America.  In  1923  his  first  book,  Cane,  was 
published  by  Boni  and  Liveright,  New  York. 


REAPERS 

Black  reapers  with  the  sound  of  steel  on  stones 
Are  sharpening  scythes.     I  see  them  place  the  hones 
In  their  hip-pockets  as  a  thing  that's  done, 
And  start  their  silent  swinging,  one  by  one. 
Black  horses  drive  a  mower  through  the  weeds, 
And  there,  a  field  rat,  startled,  squealing  bleeds, 
His  belly  close  to  ground.     I  see  the  blade, 
Blood-stained,  continue  cutting  weeds  and  shade. 


EVENING    SONG 

Full  moon  rising  on  the  waters  of  my  heart, 

Lakes  and  moon  and  fires, 

Cloine  tires, 

Holding  her  lips  apart. 


JEAN    TOOMER  95 

Promises  of  slumber  leaving  shore  to  charm  the  moon, 

Miracle  made  vesper-keeps, 

Cloine  sleeps, 

And  I'll  be  sleeping  soon. 

Cloine,  curled  like  the  sleepy  waters  where  the  moon- 
waves  start, 
Radiant,  resplendently  she  gleams, 
Cloine  dreams, 
Lips  pressed  against  my  heart. 


GEORGIA    DUSK 

The  sky,  lazily  disdaining  to  pursue 
The  setting  sun,  too  indolent  to  hold 
A  lengthened  tournament  for  flashing  gold, 

Passively  darkens  for  night's  barbecue, 

A  feast  of  moon  and  men  and  barking  hounds, 

An  orgy  for  some  genius  of  the  South 

With  blood-hot  eyes  and  cane-lipped  scented  mouth, 
Surprised  in  making  folk-songs  from  soul  sounds. 

The  sawmill  blows  its  whistle,  buzz-saws  stop, 
And  silence  breaks  the  bud  of  knoll  and  hill, 
Soft  settling  pollen  where  plowed  lands  fulfill 

Their  early  promise  of  bumper  crop. 


96  JEAN    TOOMER 

Smoke  from  the  pyramidal  sawdust  pile 

Curls  up,  blue  ghosts  of  trees,  tarrying  low 
Where  only  chips  and  stumps  are  left  to  show 

The  solid  proof  of  former  domicile. 

Meanwhile,  the  men,  with  vestiges  of  pomp, 
Race  memories  of  king  and  caravan, 
High-priests,  an  ostrich,  and  a  juju-man, 

Go  singing  through  the  footpaths  of  the  swamp. 

Their  voices  rise  .  .  .  the  pine  trees  are  guitars, 
Strumming,  pine-needles  fall  like  sheets  of  rain  .  . 
Their  voices  rise  .  .  .  the  chorus  of  the  cane 

Is  caroling  a  vesper  to  the  stars  .  .  . 

O  singers,  resinous  and  soft  your  songs 
Above  the  sacred  whisper  of  the  pines, 
Give  virgin  lips  to  cornfield  concubines, 

Bring  dreams  of  Christ  to  dusky  cane-lipped  throngs. 


SONG    OF    THE    SON 

Pour  O  pour  that  parting  soul  in  song, 
O  pour  it  in  the  sawdust  glow  of  night, 
Into  the  velvet  pine-smoke  air  to-night, 
And  let  the  valley  carry  it  along. 
And  let  the  valley  carry  it  along. 


JEAN    TOOMER  97 

0  land  and  soil,  red  soil  and  sweet-gum  tree, 
So  scant  of  grass,  so  profligate  of  pines, 
Now  just  before  an  epoch's  sun  declines, 
Thy  son,  in  time,  I  have  returned  to  thee, 
Thy  son,  I  have  in  time  returned  to  thee. 

In  time,  for  though  the  sun  is  setting  on 
A  song-lit  race  of  slaves,  it  has  not  set ; 
Though  late,  O  soil,  it  is  not  too  late  yet 
To  catch  thy  plaintive  soul,  leaving,  soon  gone, 
Leaving,  to  catch  thy  plaintive  soul  soon  gone. 

O  Negro  slaves,  dark  purple  ripened  plums, 
Squeezed,  and  bursting  in  the  pine-wood  air, 
Passing,  before  they  stripped  the  old  tree  bare 
One  plum  was  saved  for  me,  one  seed  becomes 

An  everlasting  song,  a  singing  tree, 
Caroling  softly  souls  of  slavery, 
What  they  were,  and  what  they  are  to  me, 
Caroling  softly  souls  of  slavery. 


COTTON    SONG 

Come,  brother,  come.    Let's  lift  it ; 
Come  now,  hewit !  roll  away ! 
Shackles  fall  upon  the  Judgment  Day 
But  let's  not  wait  for  it. 


98  JEAN    TOOMER 

God's  body's  got  a  soul, 
Bodies  like  to  roll  the  soul, 
Can't  blame  God  if  we  don't  roll, 
Come,  brother,  roll,  roll ! 

Cotton  bales  are  the  fleecy  way 

Weary  sinner's  bare  feet  trod, 

Softly,  softly  to  the  throne  of  God, 

"We  ain't  agwine  t*  wait  until  th'  Judgment  Day ! 

Nassur;  nassur, 

Hump. 

Eoho,  eoho,  roll  away! 

We  ain't  agwine  t'  wait  until  th*  Judgment  Day !" 

God's  body's  got  a  soul, 
Bodies  like  to  roll  the  soul, 
Can't  blame  God  if  we  don't  roll, 
Come,  brother,  roll,  roll ! 


FACE 

Hair — 

silver-gray, 

like  streams  of  stars, 

Brows — 

recurved  canoes 

quivered  by  the  ripples  blown  by  pain, 

Her  eyes — 


JEAN    TOOMER 

mist  of  tears 

condensing  on  the  flesh  below 
And  her  channeled  muscles 
are  cluster  grapes  of  sorrow 
purple  in  the  evening  sun 
nearly  ripe  for  worms. 


NOVEMBER    COTTON   FLOWER 

Boll- weevil's  coming,  and  the  winter's  cold, 
Made  cotton-stalks  look  rusty,  seasons  old, 
And  cotton,  scarce  as  any  southern  snow, 
Was  vanishing ;  the  branch,  so  pinched  and  slow, 
Failed  in  its  function  as  the  autumn  rake ; 
Drouth  fighting  soil  had  caused  the  soil  to  take 
All  water  from  the  streams  ;  dead  birds  were  found 
In  wells  a  hundred  feet  below  the  ground — 
Such  was  the  season  when  the  flower  bloomed. 
Old  folks  were  startled,  and  it  soon  assumed 
Significance.     Superstition  saw 
Something  it  had  never  seen  before: 
Brown  eyes  that  loved  without  a  trace  of  fear, 
Beauty  so  sudden  for  that  time  of  year. 


JOSEPH     S.     COTTER,    JR. 

"At   Thanksgiving  time    1894    Paul   Laurence   Dunbar, 
the  Negro  poet,  was  a  guest  in  my  house  in  Louisville,  Ky. 


100  JOSEPH     S.     COTTER,    JR. 

Here   for  the   first  time  in   the   South   he   read  the   Negro 
dialect  poems   that  afterwards   made  him   famous. 

September  2nd,  1895,  my  son,  the  late  Joseph  S.  Cotter, 
Jr.,  was  born  in  the  room  in  which  these  poems  were  read. 
He  learned  to  read  and  write  from  his  sister,  Florence 
Olivia,  who  was  two  years  older.  Before  he  entered  school 
at  the  age  of  six  years  he  had  read  about  thirty  books — 
these  included  all  the  readers  in  the  elementary  schools — 
l-2-3-4-5-6-7-8th  grades  and  parts  of  the  Bible. 

Mrs.  Maria  F.  Cotter,  my  wife,  and  I  held  both  children 
back.  We  refused  to  allow  them  to  be  promoted  in  several 
instances.  Both  were  graduated  from  the  Louisville  Cen- 
tral High  School  under  16;  Florence  Olivia  won  first  honor 
of  her  class  and  Joseph  the  second.  He  was  graduated 
June  1911.  After  a  year  and  a  half  at  Fisk  University, 
Nashville,  Tenn.,  Florence  Olivia  wrote  us  that  Joseph 
had  tuberculosis  and  must  leave  school.  He  returned  home 
and  was  put  under  a  doctor.  The  16th  of  the  following 
December,  Florence  Olivia  returned  from  Fisk  with  tuber- 
culosis, and  one  year  from  that  day  she  died.  It  was 
grieving  over  his  sister's  death  that  discovered  to  Joseph 
his  poetic  talent.  He  died  February  3rd,  1919,  leaving 
his  published  poems, — The  Band  of  Gideon  and  two 
other  unpublished  works — one  of  poems  and  one  of  one- 
act  plays." 

Joseph  S.  Cotter,  Sr. 

RAIN    MUSIC 

On  the  dusty  earth-drum 

Beats  the  falling  rain; 
Now  a  whispered  murmur, 

Now  a  louder  strain. 


JOSEPH    S.     COTTER,    JR.  101 

Slender,  silvery  drumsticks, 

On  an  ancient  drum, 
Beat  the  mellow  music 

Bidding  life  to  come. 

Chords  of  earth  awakened, 

Notes  of  greening  spring, 
Rise  and  fall  triumphant 

Over  every  thing. 

Slender,  silvery  drumsticks 

Beat  the  long  tattoo — 
God,  the  Great  Musician, 

Calling  life  anew. 


SUPPLICATION 

I  am  so  tired  and  weary, 
So  tired  of  the  endless  fight, 

So  weary  of  waiting  the  dawn 
And  finding  endless  night. 

That  I  ask  but  rest  and  quiet — 
Rest  for  the  days  that  are  gone, 

And  quiet  for  the  little  space 
That  I  must  journey  on. 


102  JOSEPH     S.     COTTER,    JR. 

AN    APRIL    DAY 

On  such  a  day  as  this  I  think, 

On  such  a  day  as  this, 
When  earth  and  sky  and  nature's  whole 

Are  clad  in  April's  bliss ; 
And  balmy  zephyrs  gently  waft 

Upon  your  cheek  a  kiss ; 
Sufficient  is  it  j  ust  to  live 

On  such  a  day  as  this. 

THE    DESERTER 

I  know  not  why  or  whence  he  came 
Or  how  he  chanced  to  go ; 

I  only  know  he  brought  me  love 
And  going,  left  me  woe. 

I  do  not  ask  that  he  turn  back, 
Nor  seek  where  he  may  rove; 

For  where  woe  rules  can  never  be 
The  dwelling  place  of  love. 

For  love  went  out  the  door  of  hope, 

And  on  and  on  has  fled ; 
Caring  no  more  to  dwell  within 

The  house  where  faith  is  dead. 


JOSEPH    S.     COTTER,    JR.  103 

AND   WHAT    SHALL    YOU    SAY? 

Brother,  come! 

And  let  us  go  unto  our  God. 

And  when  we  stand  before  Him 

I  shall  say — 

"Lord,  I  do  not  hate, 

I  am  hated. 

I  scourge  no  one, 

I  am  scourged. 

I  covet  no  lands, 

My  lands  are  coveted. 

I  mock  no  peoples, 

My  people  are  mocked." 

And,  brother,  what  shall  you  say? 

THE    BAND    OF    GIDEON 

The  band  of  Gideon  roam  the  sky, 
The  howling  wind  is  their  war-cry, 
The  thunder's  role  is  their  trump's  peal, 
And  the  lightning's  flash  their  vengeful  steel. 

Each  black  cloud 

Is  a  fiery  steed. 

And  they  cry  aloud 

With  each  strong  deed, 
"The  sword  of  the  Lord  and  Gideon." 


104  JOSEPH     S.     COTTER,     JR. 

And  men  below  rear  temples  high 

And  mock  their  God  with  reasons  why, 

And  live  in  arrogance,  sin  and  shame, 

And  rape  their  souls  for  the  world's  good  name. 

Each  black  cloud 

Is  a  fiery  steed. 

And  they  cry  aloud 

With  each  strong  deed, 
"The  sword  of  the  Lord  and  Gideon." 

The  band  of  Gideon  roam  the  sky, 
And  view  the  earth  with  baleful  eye; 
In  holy  wrath  they  scourge  the  land 
With  earth-quake,  storm  and  burning  brand. 

Each  black  cloud 

Is  a  fiery  steed. 

And  they  cry  aloud 

With  each  strong  deed, 
"The  sword  of  the  Lord  and  Gideon." 

The  lightnings  flash  and  the  thunders  roll, 
And  "Lord  have  mercy  on  my  soul," 
Cry  men  as  they  fall  on  the  stricken  sod, 
In  agony  searching  for  their  God. 

Each  black  cloud 

Is  a  fiery  steed. 

And  they  cry  aloud 

With  each  strong  deed, 
"The  sword  of  the  Lord  and  Gideon." 


JOSEPH    S.    COTTER,    JR.  105 

And  men  repent  and  then  forget 

That  heavenly  wrath  they  ever  met, 

The  band  of  Gideon  yet  will  come 

And  strike  their  tongues  of  blasphemy  dumb. 

Each  black  cloud 

Is  a  fiery  steed. 

And  they  cry  aloud 

With  each  strong  deed, 
"The  sword  of  the  Lord  and  Gideon." 


BLANCHE     TAYLOR     DICKINSON 

I  was  born  on  a  farm  near  Franklin,  Kentucky,  April 
15,  1896,  and  received  my  education  variously  .  .  .  public 
schools,  Bowling  Green  Academy,  Simmon's  University 
and  Summer  schools. 

No  degree.  Taught  for  several  years  in  my  native 
state.  I  am  a  lover  of  music  and  divide  my  time  between 
the  typewriter  and  piano.  First  published  in  Franklin 
Favorite,  later,  Louisville  Leader,  Chicago  Defender, 
Pittsburgh  Courier,  Crisis,  Opportunity  and  Wayfarer.  My 
favorite  poets  are  Countee  Cullen,  Georgia  Douglas  John- 
son and  Edna  St.  Vincent  Millay;  my  favorite  past-time, 
walking  along  a  crowded  street.  I  have  a  hunch  that  I 
shall  become  a  short  story  writer  and  my  favorite  exertion 
is  trying  to  perfect  my  "technique/' 

At  present  I  am  living  in  Sewickley,  Penna. 


106  BLANCHE    TAYLOR    DICKINSON 

THE    WALLS    OF    JERICHO 

Jericho  is  on  the  inside 
Of  the  things  the  world  likes  best; 
"We  want  in,"  the  dark  ones  cried, 
"We  will  love  it  as  the  rest." 

"Let  me  learn,"  the  dark  ones  say. 
They  have  learned  that  Faith  must  do 
More  than  meditate  and  pray 
That  a  boulder  may  fall  through 
Making  one  large  man  size  entrance 
Into  wondrous  Jericho. 
They  have  learned :  forget  the  distance, 
Count  no  steps,  nor  stop  to  blow. 

Jericho  still  has  her  high  wall, 
Futile  barrier  of  Power.  .  .  . 
Echoed  with  the  dark  ones'  footfall 
Marching  around  her  every  hour ; 
Knowledge   strapped   down  like   a   knapsack 
Not  cumbersome,  and  money 
Not  too  much  to  strain  the  back.  .  .  . 
Dark  ones  seeking  milk  and  honey. 

Over  in  the  city  staring 

Up  at  us  along  the  wall 

Are  the  fat  ones,  trembling,  swearing 

There  is  no  room  there  for  us  all ! 


BLANCHE    TAYLOR    DICKINSON  107 

But  there've  been  too  many  rounds 

Made  to  give  the  trip  up  here. 

Shout  for  joy  .  .  .  hear  how  it  sounds.  •  .  • 

The  very  walls  echo  with  cheer! 


POEM 

Ah,  I  know  what  happiness  is.  .  .  .    ! 

It  is  a  timid  little  fawn 

Creeping  softly  up  to  me 

For  one  caress,  then  gone 

Before  I'm  through  with  it  .  .  . 

Away,  like  dark  from  dawn! 

Well  I  know  what  happiness  is  .  .  .    ! 

It  is  the  break  of  day  that  wears 

A  shining  dew  decked  diadem  .  .  . 

An  aftermath  of  tears. 

Fawn  and  dawn,  emblems  of  j  oy  .  .  • 

Fve  played  with  them  for  years, 

And  always  they  will  slip  away 

Into  the  brush  of  another  day. 


REVELATION 


She  walked  along  the  crowded  street 
Forgetting  all  but  that  she 


108  BLANCHE    TAYLOR     DICKINSON 

Was  walking  as  the  other  girls 
And  dressed  as  carefully. 

The  windows  of  the  stores  were  frilled 

To  lure  femininity, 

To  empty  little  pocketbooks 

And  assuage  queen  vanity. 

And  so  my  walker  liked  a  dress 
Of  silver  and  of  gold, 
Draped  on  a  bisque  mannequin 
So  blond  and  slim  and  bold. 

She  took  the  precious  metal  home 
And  waved  her  soft  black  hair; 
Powder,  rouge  and  lipstick  made 
Her  very  neat  and  fair. 

She  slipped  the  dress  on  carefully, 
Her  vain  dream  fell  away.  .  .  . 
The  mirror  showed  a  brownskin  girl 
She  hadn't  seen  all  day! 


"You  have  classic  features, 
Something  like  Cleopatra. 
Eyes  like  whirlpools 
And  as  dangerous.  .  .  • 
Weeping  willow  eyelashes 


BLANCHE    TAYLOR    DICKINSON  109 

Shade  the  mighty  depth 

Of  your  eyes.     Your  lips 

Are  danger  signals 

Which  a  fool  like  me 

Will   not    regard.  .  .  . 

But  go  dashing  past  them 

To  gain  a  kiss  ...  or  Death." 

That  is  what  he  said  to  me, 
I  filled  with  a  sweet  and  vain  regret 
That  Beauty,  the  stranger,  and  I  had  met. 
His  praise  was  heat  to  drink  me  dry. 
So  I  found  a  stream,  and  with  a  sigh 
I  stooped  to  drink  .  .  .  ah,  to  see 
The  cruel  water  reflecting  me! 
Dark-eyed,   thick-lipped,    harsh,    short    hair  .  •  . 
But  Lucifer  saw  himself,  too,  fair. 


THAT    HILL 

It  crawled  away  from  'neath  my  feet 
And  left  me  standing  there ; 
A  little  at  a  time,  went  up 
An  atmospheric  stair. 

I  couldn't  go  for  watching  it, 
To  see  where  it  would  stop ; 
A  tree  sprang  out  and  waved  to  me 
When  it  had  reached  the  top. 


110  BLANCHE    TAYLOR    DICKINSON 

The  tree  kept  nodding  friendly  like, 
Beckoning  me  to  follow ; 
And  I  went  crawling  up  and  up, 
Like  it  did  from  the  hollow. 

Then  I  saw  why  the  thing  would  go 
A-soaring  from  the  dell — 
'Twas  nearing  Heaven  every  bound, 
And  fleeing  fast  from  Hell! 


TO    AN    ICICLE 

Chilled  into  a  serenity 

As  rigid  as  your  pose 

You  linger  trustingly, 

But  a  gutter  waits  for  you. 

Your  elegance  does  not  secure 

You  favors  with  the  sun. 

He  is  not  one  to  pity  fragileness, 

He  thinks  all  cheeks  should  burn 

And  feel  how  tears  can  run. 


FOUR    WALLS 

Four  great  walls  have  hemmed  me  in, 
Four  strong,  high  walls: 
Right   and  wrong, 
Shall  and  shan't. 


BLANCHE    TAYLOR    DICKINSON  111 

The  mighty  pillars  tremble  when 
My  conscience  palls 
And  sings  its  song — 
I  can,  I  can't. 

If  for  a  moment  Samson's  strength 

Were  given  me  I'd  shove 

Them  away  from  where  I  stand; 

Free,  I  know  I'd  love 

To  ramble  soul  and  all, 

And  never  dread  to  strike  a  wall. 

Again,  I  wonder  would  that  be 
Such  a  happy  state  for  me  .   .  . 
The  going,  being,  doing,  sham — 
And  never  knowing  where  I  am. 
I  might  not  love  freedom  at  all; 
My  tired  wings  might  crave  a  wall — 
Four  walls  to  rise  and  pen  me  in 
This  conscious  world  with  guarded  men. 


FRANK     HORNE 

Born  in  New  York  City,  August  18,  1899,  I  have  lived 
all  but  about  six  years  in  Brooklyn.  I  studied  at  the  Col- 
lege of  the  City  of  New  York,  and  was  guilty  there  of  my 
first  sonnet;  but  am  ever  so  much  more  proud  of  my  varsity 
letters  won  on  the  track — once  ran  a  "10  flat"  hundred  and 
a  51  sec.  quarter.  Went  to  the  Northern  Illinois  College 
of  Ophthalmology — took  degree  "Doctor  of  Optometry." 
Have  practiced  in  Chicago   and   New  York.      At  present 


112  FRANK    nORNE 

writing,  am  doing  some  teaching  and  publicity  work  at  the 
Fort  Valley  High  and  Industrial  School,  Georgia,  while 
recovering  from  a  mean  illness.  Have  had  a  hankering 
to  write  as  long  as  I  can  remember,  but  Charles  Johnson, 
Editor  of  Opportunity  and  a  certain  Gwendolyn  Bennett 
are  responsible  for  my  trying  it  openly.  My  "published 
works"  are  limited  to  the  indulgence  of  Opportunity,  The 
Crisis,  and  Braithwaite's  Anthology.  It  is  the  perver- 
sity of  my  nature  to  crave  the  ability  to  write  good  prose, 
and  yet  my  attempts  at  poetry  are  the  only  things  to  which 
any  notice  is  given." 


ON    SEEING    TWO    BROWN    BOYS    IN 
A    CATHOLIC    CHURCH 

It  is  fitting  that  you  be  here 
Little  brown  boys 
With  Christ-like  eyes 
And  curling  hair. 

Look  you  on  yon  crucifix 

Where  He  hangs  nailed  and  pierced 

With  head  hung  low 

And  eyes  a'blind  with  blood  that  drips 

From  a  thorny  crown  .  .  . 

Look  you  well, 

You  shall  know  this  thing. 

Judas'  kiss  will  burn  your  cheek 
And  you  shall  be  denied 
By  your  Peter — 


FRANK    HORNE  113 

And  Gethsemane  .  .  . 
You  shall  know  full  well 
Gethsemane  .  .  . 

You,  too,  will  suffer  under  Pontius  Pilate 

And  feel  the  rugged  cut  of  rough  hewn  cross 

Upon  your  surging  shoulder — 

They  will  spit  in  your  face 

And  laugh  .  .  . 

They  will  nail  you  up  twixt  thieves 

And  gamble  for  your  little  garments. 

And  in  this  you  will  exceed  God 
For  on  this  earth 
You  shall  know  Hell — 

O  little  brown  boys 

With  Christ-like  eyes 

And  curling  hair 

It  is  fitting  that  you  be  here. 


TO    A    PERSISTENT    PHANTOM 

I  buried  you  deeper  last  night 

You  with  your  tears 

And  your  tangled  hair 

You  with  your  lips 

That  kissed  so  fair 

I  buried  you  deeper  last  night. 


114  FRANK    HORNE 

I  buried  you  deeper  last  night 

With  fuller  breasts 

And  stronger  arms 

With  softer  lips 

And  newer  charms 

I  buried  you  deeper  last  night, 


Deeper aye,  deeper 

And  again  tonight 
Till  that  gay  spirit 
That  once  was  you 
Will  tear  its   soul 
In  climbing  through  .  .  . 

Deeper aye,  deeper 

I  buried  you  deeper  last  night. 


LETTERS    FOUND    NEAR    A 
SUICIDE 


To  all  of  you 

My  little  stone 

Sinks  quickly 

Into  the  bosom  of  this  deep,  dark  pool 

Of   oblivion  .  .  . 

I  have  troubled  its  breast  but  little 

Yet  those  far  shores 

That  knew  me  not 

Will  feel  the  fleeting,  furtive  kiss 

Of  my  tiny  concentric  ripples  .  .  • 


FRANK    HORNE  115 


To  Lewellyn 

You  have  borne  full  well 

The  burden  of  my  friendship — 

I  have  drunk  deep 

At  your  crystal  pool, 

And  in  return 

I  have  polluted  its  waters 

With  the  bile  of  my  hatred. 

I  have  flooded  your  soul 

With  tortuous  thoughts, 

I  have  played  Iscariot 

To  your  Pythias  .  .  . 

To  Mother 

I  came 

In  the  blinding  sweep 

Of  ecstatic  pain, 

I  go 

In  the  throbbing  pulse 

Of  aching  space — 

In  the  eons  between 

I  piled  upon  you 

Pain  on  pain 

Ache  on  ache 

And  yet  as  I  go 

I  shall  know 

That  you  will  grieve 

And  want  me  back  .  •  • 


116  FRANK    HORNE 

To  B 

You  have  freed  me — 

In  opening  wide  the  doors 

Of  flesh 

You  have  freed  me 

Of  the  binding  leash. 

I  have  climbed  the  heights 

Of  white  disaster 

My  body  screaming 

In  the  silver  crash  of  passion  .  •  • 

Before  you  gave  yourself 

To  him 

I  had  chained  myself 

For  you. 

But  when  at  last 

You  lowered  your  proud  flag 

In  surrender  complete 

You  gave  me  too,  as  hostage — 

And  I  have  wept  my  joy 

At  the  dawn-tipped  shrine 

Of  many  breasts. 

To  Jean 

When  you  poured  your  love 

Like  molten  flame 

Into  the  throbbing  mold 

Of  her  pulsing  veins 

Leaving  her  blood  a  river  of  fire 

And  her  arteries  channels  of  light, 

I  hated  you  .  .  . 


FRANK    HORNE  117 

Hated  with  that  primal  hate 

That  has  its  wells 

In  the  flesh  of  me 

And  the  flesh  of  you 

And  the  flesh  of  her 

I  hated  you — 

Hated  with  envy 

Your  mastery  of  her  being  .  .  . 

With  one  fleshy  gesture 

You  pricked  the  iridescent  bubble 

Of  my  dreams 

And  so  to  make 

Your  conquest  more  sweet 

I  tell  you  now 

That  I  hated  you. 

To  Catalina 

Love  thy  piano,  Oh  girl, 

It  will  give  you  back 

Note  for  note 

The  harmonies  of  your  soul. 

It  will  sing  back  to  you 

The  high  songs  of  your  heart. 

It  will  give 

As  well  as  take.  .  .  . 

To  Mariette 

I  sought  consolation 

In  the  sorrow  of  your  eyes. 

You  sought  reguerdon 


118  FRANK    UORNE 

In  the  crying  of  my  heart  .   .   . 
We  found  that  shattered  dreamers 
Can  be  bitter  hosts.  .  .  • 


To 


You  call  it 

Death  of  the  Spirit 

And  I  call  it  Life  .  .  . 

The  vigor  of  vibration, 

The  muffled  knocks, 

The  silver  sheen  of  passion's  flood, 

The  ecstasy  of  pain  .  .  . 

You  call  it 

Death  of  the  Spirit 

And  I  call  it  Life. 

To  Telie 

You  have  made  my  voice 

A  rippling  laugh 

But  my  heart 

A  crying  thing  .  .  . 

'Tis  better  thus : 

A  fleeting  kiss 

And  then, 

The  dark  .  .  . 

To  "Chick" 

Oh  Achilles  of  the  moleskins 
And  the  gridiron 
Do  not  wonder 


FRANK    HORNE  119 

Nor  doubt  that  this  is  I 

That  lies  so  calmly  here — 

This  is  the  same  exultant  beast 

That  so  j  oyously 

Ran  the  ball  with  you 

In  those  far  flung  days  of  abandon. 

You  remember  how  recklessly 

We  revelled  in  the  heat  and  the  dust 

And  the  swirl  of  conflict? 

You  remember  they  called  us 

The  Terrible  Two? 

And  you  remember 

After  we  had  battered  our  heads 

And  our  bodies 

Against  the  stonewall  of  their  defense, — 

You  remember  the  signal  I  would  call 

And  how  you  would  look  at  me 

In  faith  and  admiration 

And  say  "Let's  go,"  .  .  . 

How  the  lines  would  clash 

And  strain, 

And  how  I  would  slip  through 

Fighting  and  squirming 

Over  the  line 

To  victory. 

You  remember,  Chick?  .  .  . 

When  you  gaze  at  me  here 

Let  that  same  light 

Of  faith  and  admiration 

Shine  in  your  eyes 


120  FRANK    HORNE 

For  I  have  battered  the  stark  stonewall 

Before  me  .  .  . 

I  have  kept  faith  with  you 

And  now 

I  have  called  my  signal, 

Found  my  opening 

And  slipped  through 

Fighting  and  squirming 

Over  the  line 

To  victory.  .  .  . 

To  Wanda 

To  you,  so  far  away 

So  cold  and  aloof, 

To  you,  who  knew  me  so  well, 

This  is  my  last  Grand  Gesture 

This  is  my  last  Great  Effect 

And  as  I  go  winging 

Through  the  black  doors  of  eternity 

Is  that  thin  sound  I  hear 

Your  applause?  .  .  . 


NIGGER 

A  Chant  for  Children 

Little  Black  boy 
Chased  down  the  street — 
"Nigger,  nigger  never  die 


FRANK    HORNE  121 

Black  face  an*  shiney  eye, 

Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  ." 

Hannibal  .  .  .  Hannibal 

Bangin*  thru  the  Alps 

Licked  the  proud  Romans, 

Ran  home  with  their  scalps — 

"Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .    " 

Othello  .  .  .  black  man 

Mighty  in  war 

Listened  to  Iago 

Called  his  wife  a  whore — 

"Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  ." 

Crispus  .  .  .  Attucks 

Bullets  in  his  chest 

Red  blood  of  freedom 

Runnin'  down  his  vest 

"Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  ." 


Toussant  .  .  .  Toussant 

Made  the  French  flee 

Fought  like  a  demon 

Set  his  people  free — 

"Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  . 


99 


Jesus  .  .  .  Jesus 
Son  of  the  Lord 
— Spit  in  his  face 


122  FRANK    HORNE 

— Nail  him  on  a  board 

"Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  ." 

Little  Black  boy 

Runs  down  the  street — 

"Nigger,  nigger  never  die 

Black  face  an'  shiney  eye, 

Nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  .  nigger  .  .  ." 

LEWIS     ALEXANDER 

Lewis  Alexander  was  born  July  4,  1900,  at  Washing- 
ton, D.  C.  He  was  educated  in  the  public  schools  of 
Washington  and  at  Howard  University  where  he  was  a 
member  of  the  Howard  Players.  He  has  also  studied 
at  the  University  of  Pennsylvania.  He  was  a  member  of 
the  Ethiopian  Art  Theatre  for  the  season  1922-1923  play- 
ing in  Salome  and  The  Comedy  of  Errors  on  Broadway. 
As  the  result  of  a  recent  tour  of  North  and  South  Caro- 
lina he  edited  in  May  1927  the  Negro  Number  of  the 
Carolina  Magazine.  He  has  been  writing  poetry  since 
1917,  specializing  in  Japanese  forms.  Two  Little  The- 
atre groups  in  Washington,  The  Ira  Aldridge  Players  of 
the  Grover  Cleveland  School  and  the  Randall  Community 
Center  Players  have  been  under  his  direction. 


NEGRO    WOMAN 

The  sky  hangs  heavy  tonight 
Like  the  hair  of  a  Negro  woman. 
The  scars  of  the  moon  are  curved 


LEWIS    ALEXANDER  123 

Like  the  wrinkles  on  the  brow  of  a  Negro  woman. 

The  stars  twinkle  tonight 
Like  the  glaze  in  a  Negro  woman's  eyes, 
Drinking  the  tears  set  flowing  by  an  aging  hurt 
Gnawing  at  her  heart. 

The  earth  trembles  tonight 

Like  the  quiver  of  a  Negro  woman's  eye-lids  cupping 
tears. 


AFRICA 

Thou  art  not  dead,  although  the  spoiler's  hand 
Lies  heavy  as  death  upon  thee ;  though  the  wrath 
Of  its  accursed  might  is  in  thy  path 
And  has  usurped  thy  children  of  their  land ; 
Though  yet  the  scourges  of  a  monstrous  band 
Roam  on  thy  ruined  fields,  thy  trampled  lanes, 
Thy  ravaged  homes  and  desolated  fanes; 
Thou  art  not  dead,  but  sleeping, — Motherland. 

A  mighty  country,  valorous  and  free, 
Thou  shalt  outlive  this  terror  and  this  pain ; 
Shall  call  thy  scattered  children  back  to  thee, 
Strong  with  the  memory  of  their  brothers  slain; 
And  rise  from  out  thy  charnel  house  to  be 
Thine  own  immortal,  brilliant  self  again ! 


124  LEWIS    ALEXANDER 

TRANSFORMATION 

I  return  the  bitterness, 

Which  you  gave  to  me ; 
When  I  wanted  loveliness 

Tantalant  and  free. 

I  return  the  bitterness 

It  is  washed  by  tears; 
Now  it  is  a  loveliness 

Garnished  through  the  years. 

I  return  it  loveliness, 

Having  made  it  so ; 
For  I  wore  the  bitterness 

From  it  long  ago. 

THE    DARK    BROTHER 

"Lo,  I  am  black  but  I  am  comely  too, 
Black  as  the  night,  black  as  the  deep  dark  caves. 
I  am  the  scion  of  a  race  of  slaves 
Who  helped  to  build  a  nation  strong  that  you 
And  I  may  stand  within  the  world's  full  view, 
Fearless  and  firm  as  dreadnoughts  on  rough  waves; 
Holding  a  banner  high  whose  floating  braves 
The  opposition  of  the  tried  untrue. 

Casting  an  eye  of  love  upon  my  face, 
Seeing  a  newer  light  within  my  eyes, 


LEWIS    ALEXANDER  125 

A  rarer  beauty  in  your  brother  race 
Will  merge  upon  your  visioning  fullwise. 
Though  I  am  black  my  heart  through  love  is  pure, 
And  you  through  love  my  blackness  shall  endure !" 

TANKA    I  — VIII 


Could  I  but  retrace 

The  winding  stairs  fate  built  me. 

They  fell  from  my  feet. 

Now  I  stand  on  the  high  round. 

Down  beneath  height  above  depth- 


II 


Through  the  eyes  of  life 
I  looked  in  at  my  own  heart : 
A  long  furrowed  field 
Grown  cement  waiting  for  seed 
Baking  in  desolation. 

Ill 

Drink  in  moods  of  j  oy ! 

Why  should  the  sky  be  lonely? 

Neither  sun  nor  moon — 

How  my  heart  is  shy  of  night 

Like  Autumn's  leaf  brown  pendants. 


126  LEWIS    ALEXANDER 

IV 

Cold  against  the  sky 

The  blue  jays  cried  at  dawning. 

The  larks  where  are  they? 

Heavily  upon  the  air 

My  ears  tuned  in  to  listen. 


So  this  is  the  reed? 
The  very  pipes  for  singing — 
Life  plays  me  new  songs. 
Wistfully  from  out  the  dawn 
The  crows  broke  across  the  sky ! 

VI 

And  now  Spring  has  come 
Blossoming  up  my  garden. 
I  alone  unchanged. 
Moving  in  my  house  of  Autumn. 
One  leaf  alone  saves  a  tree. 

VII 

By  the  pool  of  life 

Willows  are  drooping  tonight 

I  can  see  no  stars. 

What  dances  in  the  water? 

O  my  clouds  dripping  with  tears, 


LEWIS    ALEXANDER  127 

VIII 

Could  I  hear  your  voice 

O  but  this  silence  is  sweet 

Words  mar  all  beauty. 

Turn  then  into  your  own  heart 

And  pluck  the  roots  from  the  soil — 

JAPANESE    HOKKU 

O  apple  blossoms 

Give  me  your  words  of  silence, 

Yes,  your  charming  speech. 

If  you  would  know  me, 
Do  not  regard  this  display ; 
Mingle  with  my  speech. 


Why  sit  like  the  sphinx, 
Watching  the  caravan  pass? 
Join  in  the  parade. 


What  if  the  wind  blows? 

What   if  the  leaves   are   scattered, 

Now  that  they  are  dead? 


While  trimming  the  plants 
I  saw  some  flowers  drooping. 
I  am  a  flower. 


128  LEWIS    ALEXANDER 

This  is  but  my  robe, 
His  Majesty  gave  to  me. 
Garments  will  decay. 


On  the  flowering  twig, 
Lo !  the  robin  is  singing. 
It  must  be  spring. 


Looking  up  the  hill 

The  road  was  long  before  me, 

This  road  is  longer. 


Death  is  not  cruel 

From  what  I  have  seen  of  life; 

Nothing  else  remains. 


Life  is  history. 

Turn  not  away  from  the  book. 

Write  on  every  page! 


If  you  had  not  sung 

Then  what  would  I  imitate, 

Happy  nightingale  ? 


Sitting  by  the  pool, 

I  looked  in  and  saw  my  face. 

O  that  I  were  blind ! 


LEWIS    ALEXANDER  129 

DAY   AND    NIGHT 

The  day  is  a  Negro 

Yelling  out  of  breath. 
The  night  is  a  Negro 

Laughing  up  to  death. 

The  day  is  a  jazz  band 

Blasting  loud  and  wild. 
The  night  is  a  jazz  band 

Moaning  Blues  songs,  child. 

The  day  is  the  sunshine 

Undressed  in  the  street. 
The  night  is  the  sunshine 

Dressed  from  head  to  feet. 

I  am  like  a  rainbow 

Arched  across  the  way. 
Yes,  I  am  a  rainbow 

Being  night  nor  day. 

STERLING     A.     BROWN 

I  was  born  in  Washington,  D.  C,  the  first  of  May, 
1901.  I  received  primary  and  secondary  education  in  the 
Public  Schools  of  that  city,  and  on  a  farm  near  Laurel, 
Md. ;  entered  Williams  College  in  1918,  was  elected  to 
Phi  Beta  Kappa  in  1921,  graduated  in  1922;  and  received 
my  Master  of  Arts  Degree  at  Harvard  in  1923.     Since  that 


130  STERLING    A.     BROWN 

time  I  have  been  seeking  a  more  liberal  education  teach- 
ing school.  I  have  been  inflicted  on  unsuspecting,  helpless 
students;  teaching  diverse  things  at  Manassas  Summer 
School  in  Virginia,  Rhetoric  and  Literature  at  Virginia 
Seminary  and  College,  Lynchburg,  Va.,  and  Literature 
at  Lincoln  University,  Jefferson  City,  Mo. 

From  early  years  I  have  lisped  in  numbers  but  the 
numbers  seem  improper  fractions.  I  have  always  been  in- 
terested in  people,  particularly  and  generally,  and  in 
books.     The  list  runs  from  Homer  to  Housman. 

Except  for  an  essay  on  Roland  Hayes  submitted  to  an 
Opportunity  contest,  and  occasional  poems  and  reviews, 
I  have  published  nothing  of  the  voluminous  works  clutter- 
ing my  desk. 


ODYSSEY    OF    BIG   BOY 

Lemme  be  wid  Casey  Jones, 

Lemme  be  wid  Stagolee, 
Lemme  be  wid  such  like  men 

When  Death  takes  hoi'  on  me, 

When  Death  takes  hol?  on  me.  .  .  . 

Done  skinned  as  a  boy  in  Kentucky  hills, 

Druv  steel  dere  as  a  man, 
Done  stripped  tobacco  in  Virginia  fiels* 

Alongst  de  River  Dan, 
Alongst  de  River  Dan; 

Done  mined  de  coal  in  West  Virginia 
Liked  dat  job  jes'  fine 


STERLING    A.    BROWN  131 

Till  a  load  o'  slate  curved  roun'  my  head 
Won't  work  in  no  mo'  mine, 
Won't  work  in  no  mo'  mine; 

Done  shocked  de  corn  in  Marylan, 

In  Georgia  done  cut  cane, 
Done  planted  rice  in  South  Caline, 

But  won't  do  dat  again 
Do  dat  no  mo'  again. 

Been  roustabout  in  Memphis, 

Dockhand  in  Baltimore, 
Done  smashed  up  freight  on  Norfolk  wharves 

A  fust  class  stevedore, 

A  fust  class  stevedore.  .  .  . 

Done  slung  hash  yonder  in  de  North 

On  de  ole  Fall  River  Line 
Done  busted  suds  in  li'l  New  Yawk 

Which  ain't  no  work  o'  mine — 
Lawd,  ain't  no  work  o'  mine ; 

Done  worked  and  loafed  on  such  like  jobs 

Seen  what  dey  is  to  see 
Done  had  my  time  with  a  pint  on  my  hip 

An'  a  sweet  gal  on  my  knee 
Sweet  mommer  on  my  knee: 

Had  stovepipe  blonde  in  Macon 
Yaller'gal  in  Marylan 


132  STERLING    A.     BROWN 

In  Richmond  had  a  choklit  brown 
Called  me  huh  monkey  man — 
Huh  big  fool  monkey  man 

Had  two  fair  browns  in  Arkansaw 

And  three  in  Tennessee 
Had  Creole  gal  in  New  Orleans 

Sho  Gawd  did  two  time  me — 
Lawd  two  time,  fo'  time  me — 

But  best  gal  what  I  evah  had 

Done  put  it  over  dem 
A  gal  in  Southwest  Washington 

At  Four'n  half  and  M — 
Four'n  half  and  M.  .  .  . 

Done  took  my  livin'  as  it  came 

Done  grabbed  my  joy,  done  risked  my  life 
Train  done  caught  me  on  de  trestle 

Man  done  caught  me  wid  his  wife 
His  doggone  purty  wife  •  .  • 

I  done  had  my  women, 

I  done  had  my  fun 
Cain't  do  much  complainin' 

When  my  jag  is  done, 

Lawd,  Lawd,  my  jag  is  done. 

An'  all  dat  Big  Boy  axes 
When  time  comes  fo'  to  go 


STERLING    A.    BROWN  133 

Lemme  be  wid  John  Henry,  steel  drivm*  man 
Lemme  be  wid  ole  Jazzbo; 
Lemme  be  wid  ole  Jazzbo. 


>•   •  • 


MAUMEE    RUTH 

Might  as  well  bury  her 
And  bury  her  deep, 

Might  as  well  put  her 
Where  she  can  sleep. 

Might  as  well  lay  her 
Out  in  her  shiny  black; 

And  for  the  love  of  God 
Not  wish  her  back. 

Maum  Sal  may  miss  her 
Maum  Sal,  she  only 

With  no  one  now  to  scoff 
Sal  may  be  lonely.  .  .  . 

Nobody  else  there  is 
Who  will  be  caring 

How  rocky  was  the  road 
For  her  wayfaring; 

Nobody  be  heeding  in 

Cabin,  or  town 
That  she  is  lying  here 

In  her  best  gown. 


134  STERLING    A.    BROWN 

Boy  that  she  suckled 
How  should  he  know 

Hiding  in  city  holes 
Sniffing  the  'snow'? 

And  how  should  the  news 
Pierce  Harlem's  din 

To  reach  her  baby  gal, 
Sodden  with  gin? 

To  cut  her  withered  heart 
They  cannot  come  again, 

Preach  her  the  lies  about 
Jordan  and  then 

Might  as  well  drop  her 
Deep  in  the  ground 

Might  as  well  pray  for  her 
That  she  sleep  sound.  .  .  • 


LONG   GONE 

I  laks  yo'  kin'  of  lovin' 

Ain't  never  caught  you  wrong 
But  it  jes  ain'  nachal 

Fo'  to  stay  here  long; 

It  jes  ain'  nachal 
Fo'  a  railroad  man 


STERLING    A.    BROWN  135 

With  a  itch  fo'  travelling 
He  cain't  understan'.  .  .  . 

I  looks  at  de  rails 

An'  I  looks  at  de  ties, 
An  I  hears  an  ole  freight 

Puffin'  up  de  rise, 

An'  at  nights  on  my  pallet 

When  all  is  still 
I  listens  fo'  de  empties 

Bumpin'  up  de  hill; 

When  I  oughta  be  quiet 

I  is  got  a  itch 
Fo'  to  hear  de  whistle  blow 

Fo'  de  crossin',  or  de  switch 

An'  I  knows  de  time's  a  nearin' 

When  I  got  to  ride 
Though  its  homelike  and  happy 

At  yo'  side. 

You  is  done  all  you  could  do 

To  make  me  stay 
Tain't  no  fault  of  yours  I'se  leavin'— 

I'se  jes  dataway. 

I  is  got  to  see  some  people 
I  ain'  never  seen 


136  STERLING    A.    BROWN 

Gotta  highball  thu  some  country 
Whah  I  never  been.  .  .  . 


I  don't  know  which  way  I'm  travellin'- 

Far   or  near, 
All  I  knows  fo'  certain  is 

I  cain't  stay  here 

Ain't  no  call  at  all,  sweet  woman 

Fo'  to  carry  on, — 
Jes  my  name  and  jes  my  habit 

To  be  Long  Gone.  .  .  . 


TO  A  CERTAIN  LADY,  IN  HER 
GARDEN 

(A.  S.) 

Lady,  my  lady,  come  from  out  the  garden, 
Clayfingered,  dirtysmocked,  and  in  my  time 
I  too  shall  learn  the  quietness  of  Arden, 
Knowledge  so  long  a  stranger  to  my  rhyme. 

What  were  more  fitting  than  your  springtime  task  ? 
Here,  close  engirdled  by  your  vines  and  flowers 
Surely  there  is  no  other  grace  to  ask, 
No  better  cloister  from  the  bickering  hours. 

A  step  beyond,  the  dingy  streets  begin 
With  all  their  farce,  and  silly  tragedy — 


STERLING    A.    BROWN  137 

But  here,  unmindful  of  the  futile  din 

You  grow  your  flowers,  far  wiser  certainly, 

You  and  your  garden  sum  the  same  to  me, 
A  sense  of  strange  and  momentary  pleasure, 
And  beauty  snatched — oh,  fragmentarily 
Perhaps,  yet  who  can  boast  of  other  seizure? 

Oh,  you  have  somehow  robbed,  I  know  not  how 
The  secret  of  the  loveliness  of  these 
Whom  you  have  served  so  long.   Oh,  shameless,  now 
You  flaunt  the  winnings  of  your  thieveries. 

Thus,  I  exclaim  against  you,  profiteer.  .  .  . 
For  purpled  evenings  spent  in  pleasing  toil, 
Should  you  have  gained  so  easily  the  dear 
Capricious  largesse  of  the  miser  soil? 

Colorful  living  in  a  world  grown  dull, 
Quiet  sufficiency  in  weakling  days, 
Delicate  happiness,  more  beautiful 
For  lighting  up  belittered,  grimy  ways — 

Surely  I  think  I  shall  remember  this, 

You  in  your  old,  rough  dress,  bedaubed  with  clay, 

Your  smudgy  face  parading  happiness, 

Life's  puzzle  solved.     Perhaps,  in  turn,  you  may 

One  time,  while  clipping  bushes,  tending  vines, 
(Making  your  brave,  sly  mock  at  dastard  days,) 


138  STERLING    A.    BROWN 

Laugh  gently  at  these  trivial,  truthful  lines — ■ 
And  that  will  be  sufficient  for  my  praise. 

SALUTAMUS 

(O  Gentlemen  the  time  of  Life  is  short — Henry  IV) 

The  bitterness  of  days  like  these  we  know ; 

Much,  much  we  know,  yet  cannot  understand 

What  was  our  crime  that  such  a  searing  brand 

Not  of  our  choosing,  keeps  us  hated  so. 

Despair  and  disappointment  only  grow, 

Whatever  seeds  are  planted  from  our  hand, 

What  though   some   roads   wind    through   a  gladsome 

land? 
It  is  a  gloomy  path  that  we  must  go. 

And  yet  we  know  relief  will  come  some  day 

For  these  seared  breasts ;  and  lads  as  brave  again 

Will  plant  and  find  a  fairer  crop  than  ours. 

It  must  be  due  our  hearts,  our  minds,  our  powers ; 

These  are  the  beacons  to  blaze  out  the  way. 

We  must  plunge  onward;  onward,  gentlemen.  .  •  • 


CHALLENGE 

I  said,  in  drunken  pride  of  youth  and  you 
That  mischief-making  Time  would  never  dare 
Play  his  ill-humoured  tricks  upon  us  two, 


STERLING    A.    BROWN  139 

Strange  and  defiant  lovers  that  we  were. 

I  said  that  even  Death,  Highwayman  Death, 

Could  never  master  lovers  such  as  we, 

That  even  when  his  clutch  had  throttled  breath, 

My  hymns  would  float  in  praise,  undauntedly. 

I  did  not  think  such  words  were  bravado. 
Oh,  I  think  honestly  we  knew  no  fear, 
Of  Time  or  Death.    We  loved  each  other  so. 
And  thus,  with  you  believing  me,  I  made 
My  prophecies,  rebellious,  unafraid.  .  .  . 
And  that  was  foolish,  wasn't  it,  my  dear? 

RETURN 

I  have  gone  back  in  boyish  wonderment 

To  things  that  I  had  foolishly  put  by.  .  .  . 

Have  found  an  alien  and  unknown  content 

In  seeing  how  some  bits  of  cloud-filled  sky 

Are  framed  in  bracken  pools ;  through  chuckling  hours 

Have  watched  the  antic  frogs,  or  curiously 

Have  numbered  all  the  unnamed,  vagrant  flowers, 

That  fleck  the  unkempt  meadows,  lavishly. 

Or  where  a  headlong  toppling  stream  has  stayed 
Its  racing,  lulled  to  quiet  by  the  song 
Bursting  from  out  the  thickleaved  oaken  shade, 
There  I  have  lain  while  hours  sauntered  past — 
I  have  found  peacefulness  somewhere  at  last, 
Have  found  a  quiet  needed  for  so  long. 


140  CLARISSA    SCOTT    DELANY 

CLARISSA     SCOTT     DELANY 

"I  was  born  at  Tuskegee  Institute,  Alabama,  in  the 
Twentieth  Century,  and  spent  my  early  years  in  what  is 
known  as  the  'Black  Belt/  This  was  followed  by  seven 
years  in  New  England  (1916-1923),  three  at  Bradford 
Academy,  and  four  at  Wellesley  College,  where  my 
southern  blood  became  tinged  with  something  of  the  aus- 
terity of  that  section.  Three  years  of  teaching  in  the 
Dunbar  High  School  of  Washington,  D.  C,  convinced  me 
that  though  the  children  were  interesting,  teaching  was 
not  my  metier.  In  the  fall  of  1926  I  was  married.  Since 
completing  a  study  of  Delinquency  and  Neglect  among 
Negro  children  in  New  York  City,  my  career  has  been 
that  of  a  wife,  and  as  careers  go,  that  is  an  interesting 
and  absorbing  one." 


JOY 

Joy  shakes  me  like  the  wind  that  lifts  a  sail, 

Like  the  roistering  wind 

That  laughs  through  stalwart  pines. 

It  floods  me  like  the  sun 

On  rain-drenched  trees 

That  flash  with  silver  and  green. 

I  abandon  myself  to  joy — 

I  laugh — I  sing. 

Too  long  have  I  walked  a  desolate  way, 

Too  long  stumbled  down  a  maze 

Bewildered. 


CLARISSA    SCOTT    DELANY  141 

SOLACE 

My  window  opens  out  into  the  trees 

And  in  that  small  space 

Of  branches  and  of  sky 

I  see  the  seasons  pass 

Behold  the  tender  green 

Give  way  to  darker  heavier  leaves. 

The  glory  of  the  autumn  comes 

When  steeped  in  mellow  sunlight 

The  fragile,  golden  leaves 

Against  a  clear  blue  sky 

Linger  in  the  magic  of  the  afternoon 

And  then  reluctantly  break  off 

And  filter  down  to  pave 

A  street  with  gold. 

Then  bare,  gray  branches 

Lift  themselves  against  the 

Cold  December  sky 

Sometimes  weaving  a  web 

Across  the  rose  and  dusk  of  late  sunset 

Sometimes  against  a  frail  new  moon 

And  one  bright  star  riding 

A  sky  of  that  dark,  living  blue 

Which  comes  before  the  heaviness 

Of  night  descends,  or  the  stars 

Have  powdered  the  heavens. 

Winds  beat  against  these  trees ; 

The  cold,  but  gentle  rain  of  spring 


142  CLARISSA    SCOTT    DELANY 

Touches  them  lightly 

The  summer  torrents  strive 

To  lash  them  into  a  fury 

And  seek  to  break  them — 

But  they  stand. 

My  life  is  fevered 

And  a  restlessness  at  times 

An  agony — again  a  vague 

And  baffling  discontent 

Possesses  me. 

I  am  thankful  for  my  bit  of  sky 

And  trees,  and  for  the  shifting 

Pageant  of  the  seasons. 

Such  beauty  lays  upon  the  heart 

A  quiet. 

Such  eternal  change  and  permanence 

Take  meaning  from  all  turmoil 

And  leave  serenity 

Which  knows  no  pain. 


INTERIM 

The  night  was  made  for  rest  and  sleep, 
For  winds  that  softly  sigh ; 
It  was  not   made  for  grief   and   tears ; 
So  then  why  do  I  cry? 

The  wind  that  blows  through  leafy  trees 
Is  soft  and  warm  and  sweet; 


CLARISSA    SCOTT    DEL  ANY  143 

For  me  the  night  is  a  gracious  cloak 
To  hide  my  soul's  defeat. 

Just  one  dark  hour  of  shaken  depths, 
Of  bitter  black  despair — 
Another  day  will  find  me  brave, 
And  not  afraid  to  dare. 


THE    MASK 

So  detached  and  cool  she  is 
No  motion  e'er  betrays 
The  secret  life  within  her  soul, 
The  anguish  of  her  days. 

She  seems  to  look  upon  the  world 
With  cold  ironic  eyes, 
To  spurn  emotion's  fevered  sway, 
To  scoff  at  tears  and  sighs. 

But  once  a  woman  with  a  child 
Passed  by  her  on  the  street, 
And  once  she  heard  from  casual  lips 
A  man's  name,  bitter-sweet. 

Such  baffled  yearning  in  her  eyes, 
Such  pain  upon  her  face ! 
I  turned  aside  until  the  mask 
Was  slipped  once  more  in  place. 


144  LANGSTON    HUGHES 

LANGS TON     HUGHES 

Langston  Hughes  was  born  in  Joplin,  Missouri,  on  the 
first  of  February,  1902.  His  mother  was  a  school  teacher, 
his  father  a  lawyer.  During  most  of  his  childhood  he 
lived  with  his  grandmother  in  Lawrence,  Kansas,  where 
he  went  to  school.  This  old  lady,  Mary  Sampson  Patter- 
son Leary  Langston,  was  the  last  surviving  widow  of 
John  Brown's  Raid,  her  first  husband  having  been  one 
of  the  five  colored  men  to  die  so  gloriously  at  Harper's 
Ferry.  She  had  then  married  Charles  Langston,  brother 
of  the  Negro  senator,  John  M.  Langston,  and  in  the  seven- 
ties they  came  to  Kansas  where  the  mother  of  the  poet 
was  born. 

When  Langston  Hughes  was  thirteen  this  grandmother 
died  and  the  boy  went  to  live  with  his  mother  in  Lincoln, 
Illinois.  A  year  later  they  moved  to  Cleveland  where  he 
attended  and  was  graduated  from  the  Central  High  School. 
Then  followed  fifteen  months  in  Mexico  where  his  father 
had  been  located  for  some  years.  Here  the  young  man 
learned  Spanish,  taught  English,  and  attended  bull-fights. 
Here,  too,  he  wrote  "The  Negro  Speaks  of  Rivers,"  his 
first  poem  to  be  published  in  the  magazines. 

In  1921  he  went  to  New  York  for  a  year  at  Columbia 
University.  A  break  with  his  father  followed  and  he 
secured  work  for  the  summer  on  a  truck  farm  on  Staten 
Island.  Then  for  almost  two  years  he  travelled  as  a 
member  of  the  crew  of  freight  steamers  voyaging  to  the 
West  Coast  of  Africa  and  Northern  Europe.  In  Febru- 
ary, 1924,  he  went  to  Paris.  When  he  arrived  he  had  seven 
dollars  in  his  pockets;  so  he  soon  found  a  job  as  doorman 
in  a  Montmartre  cabaret.  Later  he  became  second  cook 
and  pan-cake  maker  at  the  Grand  Due,  a  Negro  night 
club  where  Buddy  Gilmore  sometimes  played  and  Florence 
sang.      That   summer   he   went   to    Italy,   and   September 


LANGSTON    HUGHES  145 

found  him  stranded  in  Genoa.  He  worked  his  way  back 
to  New  York  on  a  tramp  steamer,  painting  and  scrubbing 
decks. 

A  year  in  Washington  followed  where  he  worked  in  the 
office  of  the  Association  for  the  Study  of  Negro  Life  and 
History,  and  later  as  a  bus  boy  at  the  Wardman  Park 
Hotel.  There  Vachel  Lindsay  read  some  of  his  poems  and 
he  was  discovered  by  the  newspapers.  Then  his  first 
book,  The  Weary  Blues,  appeared.  He  has  now  resumed 
his  formal  education  at  Lincoln  University  in  Pennsyl- 
vania, which  he  says  is  a  place  of  beauty  and  the  ideal 
college  for  a  poet.  His  second  book  of  poems,  Fine  Clothes 
for  the  Jew,  is  a  study  in  racial  rhythms. 

Lincoln  University 
April  13,  1927 


I,  TOO1 

I,  too,  sing  America. 

I  am  the  darker  brother. 

They  send  me  to  eat  in  the  kitchen 

When  company  comes, 

But  I  laugh, 

And  eat  well, 

And  grow  strong. 

Tomorrow, 

I'll  sit  at  the  table 

*By  permission  of  and  special  arrangement  with  Alfred  A.  Knopf,  Inc.,  authorized 
publishers. 


146  LANG8TON    HUGHES 

When  company  comes. 

Nobody'll  dare 

Say  to  me, 

"Eat  in  the  kitchen," 

Then. 


Besides, 

They'll  see  how  beautiful  I  am 

And  be  ashamed, — 

I,  too,  am  America. 


PRAYER1 

I  ask  you  this : 
Which  way  to  go? 
I  ask  you  this : 
Which  sin  to  bear? 
Which  crown  to  put 
Upon  my  hair? 
I  do  not  know, 
Lord  God, 
I  do  not  know. 

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publishers. 


LANGSTON    HUGHES  147 

SONG    FOR    A   DARK    GIRL1 

Way  down  South  in  Dixie 

(Break  the  heart  of  me) 
They  hung  my  black  young  lover 

To  a  cross  roads  tree. 

Way  down  South  in  Dixie 

(Bruised  body  high  in  air) 
I  asked  the  white  Lord  Jesus 

What  was  the  use  of  prayer. 

Way  down  South  in  Dixie 

(Break  the  heart  of  me) 
Love  is  a  naked  shadow 

On  a  gnarled  and  naked  tree. 

HOMESICK    BLUES2 

De  railroad  bridge's 
A  sad  song  in  de  air. 
De  railroad  bridge's 
A  sad  song  in  de  air. 
Ever  time  de  trains  pass 
I  wants  to  go  somewhere. 


1  By  permission  of  and  special  arrangement  with  Alfred  A.  Knopf,  Inc.,  authorized 
publishers. 

1  By  permission  of  and  special  arrangement  with  Alfred  A.  Knopf,  Inc.,  authorized 
publishers. 


148  LANGSTON    HUGHES 

I  went  down  to  de  station. 
Ma  heart  was  in  ma  mouth. 
Went  down  to  de  station. 
Heart  was  in  ma  mouth. 
Lookin'  for  a  box  car 
To  roll  me  to  de  South. 

Homesick  blues,  Lawd, 

'S  a  terrible  thing  to  have. 

Homesick  blues  is 

A  terrible  thing  to  have. 

To  keep  from  cryin' 

I  opens  ma  mouth  an'  laughs. 

FANTASY    IN    PURPLE1 

Beat  the  drums  of  tragedy  for  me. 
Beat  the  drums  of  tragedy  and  death. 
And  let  the  choir  sing  a  stormy  song 
To  drown  the  rattle  of  my  dying  breath. 

Beat  the  drums  of  tragedy  for  me, 
And  let  the  white  violins  whir  thin  and  slow, 
But  blow  one  blaring  trumpet  note  of  sun 
To  go  with  me 

to  the  darkness 

where  I  go. 

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publishers. 


LANGSTON    HUGHES  149 

DREAM    VARIATION1 

To  fling  my  arms  wide 
In  some  place  of  the  sun, 
To  whirl  and  to  dance 
Till  the  white  day  is  done. 
Then  rest  at  cool  evening 
Beneath  a  tall  tree 
While  night  comes  on  gently, 

Dark  like  me, — 
That  is  my  dream ! 

To  fling  my  arms  wide 
In  the  face  of  the  sun, 
Dance!  whirl!  whirl! 
Till  the  quick  day  is  done. 
Rest  at  pale  evening.  .  .  . 

A  tall,  slim  tree 

Night  coming  tenderly 
Black  like  me. 


THE  NEGRO  SPEAKS  OF 
RIVERS2 

I've  known  rivers : 

I've  known  rivers  ancient  as  the  world  and  older  than 
the  flow  of  human  blood  in  human  veins. 

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publishers. 

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publishers. 


150  LANG8TON    HUGHES 

My  soul  has  grown  deep  like  the  rivers. 

I  bathed  in  the  Euphrates  when  dawns  were  young. 
I  built  my  hut  near  the  Congo  and  it  lulled  me  to  sleep. 
I  looked  upon  the  Nile  and  raised  the  pyramids  above  it. 
I  heard  the  singing  of  the  Mississippi  when  Abe  Lincoln 

went  down  to  New  Orleans,  and  I've  seen  its  muddy 

bosom  turn  all  golden  in  the  sunset. 

I've  known  rivers: 
Ancient,  dusky  rivers. 

My  soul  has  grown  deep  like  the  rivers. 


POEM1 

The  night  is  beautiful, 
So' the  faces  of  my  people. 

The  stars  are  beautiful, 
So  the  eyes  of  my  people. 

Beautiful,  also,  is  the  sun. 

Beautiful,  also,  are  the  souls  of  my  people. 

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publishers. 


LANGSTON    HUGHES 

SUICIDE'S   NOTE1 


151 


The  calm, 

Cool  face  of  the  river 

Asked  me  for  a  kiss. 


MOTHER    TO    SON2 

Well,  son,  I'll  tell  you: 
Life  for  me  ain't  been  no  crystal  stair. 
It's  had  tacks  in  it, 
And  splinters, 
And  boards  torn  up, 
And  places  with  no  carpet  on  the  floor — 
Bare. 

But  all  the  time 
I's  been  a-climbin'  on, 
And  reachin'  landin's, 
And  turnin'  corners, 
And  sometimes  goin'  in  the  dark 
,,    Where  there  ain't  been  no  light. 
So  boy,  don't  you  turn  back. 
Don't  you  set  down  on  the  steps 
'Cause  you  finds  it's  kinder  hard. 
Don't  you  fall  now — 
For  I's  still  goin',  honey, 

i  By  permission  of  and  special  arrangement  with  Alfred  A.  Knopf,  Inc.,  authorized 
publishers. 

3  By  permission  of  and  special  arrangement  with  Alfred  A.  Knopf,  Inc.,  authorized 
publishers. 


152  LANGSTON    HUGHES 

I's  still  climbin', 

And  life  for  me  ain't  been  no  crystal  stair. 

A   HOUSE    IN    TAOS 

Rain 
Thunder  of  the  Rain  God: 
And  we  three 
Smitten  by  beauty. 

Thunder  of  the  Rain  God: 
And  we  three 
Weary,  weary. 

Thunder  of  the  Rain  God : 
And  you,  she  and  I 
Waiting  for  nothingness. 

Do  you  understand  the  stillness 

Of  this  house  in  Taos 
Under  the  thunder  of  the  Rain  God? 

Sun 
That  there  should  be  a  barren  garden 
About  this  house  in  Taos 
Is  not  so  strange, 

But  that  there  should  be  three  barren  hearts 
In  this  one  house  in  Taos, — 
Who  carries  ugly  things  to  show  the  sun? 


LANGSTONHUGHES  153 

Moon 
Did  you  ask  for  the  beaten  brass  of  the  moon? 
We  can  buy  lovely  things  with  money, 
You,  she  and  I, 
Yet  you  seek, 
As  though  you  could  keep, 
This  unbought  loveliness  of  moon. 

Wind 
Touch  our  bodies,  wind. 
Our  bodies  are  separate,  individual  things. 
Touch  our  bodies,  wind, 
But  blow  quickly 

Through  the  red,  white,  yellow  skins 
Of  our  bodies 
To  the  terrible  snarl, 
Not  mine, 
Not  yours, 
Not  hers, 

But  all  one  snarl  of  souls. 
Blow  quickly,  wind, 

Before  we  run  back  into  the  windlessness, — 
With  our  bodies, — 
Into  the  windlessness 
Of  our  house  in  Taos. 


GWENDOLYN     B.     BENNETT 

Gwendolyn  B.  Bennett  was  born  in  Giddings,  Texas, 
on  July  8th,  1902.   Her  father  was  a  lawyer  and  her  mother 


154  GWENDOLYN    B.     BENNETT 

was  a  school  teacher.  She  received  her  elementary  train- 
ing in  the  Public  Schools  of  Washington,  D.  C,  and  Har- 
risburg,  Pa.  She  was  graduated  from  the  Girls'  High 
School  in  Brooklyn,  New  York,  during  January,  1921. 
While  she  was  in  attendance  there  she  was  a  member  of 
the  Felter  Literary  Society  and  the  Girls'  High  School 
Dramatic  Society,  being  the  first  Negro  girl  to  have  been 
elected  to  either  of  these  societies.  In  an  open  contest 
she  was  awarded  the  first  prize  for  a  poster  bearing  the 
slogan  Fresh  Air  Prevents  Tuberculosis. 

She  matriculated  in  the  Fine  Arts  Department  of 
Teachers'  College,  Columbia  University,  where  she  re- 
mained for  two  years.  She  then  entered  the  Normal  Art 
Course  at  Pratt  Institute,  Brooklyn,  New  York.  She  was 
the  author  of  her  class  play  each  of  the  two  years  she 
was  there.  In  her  Junior  Year  she  played  the  leading 
part  in  the  play  which  she  had  herself  written.  She  was 
graduated  from  Pratt  Institute  June  1924. 

She  then  became  a  member  of  the  Howard  University 
Faculty  in  Fine  Arts  as  Instructor  in  Design,  Water-color 
and  Crafts.  During  the  Christmas  holidays  of  the  school 
year  1924-25  Miss  Bennett  was  awarded  the  Thousand 
Dollar  Foreign  Scholarship  by  the  Alpha  Sigma  Chapter 
of  the  Delta  Sigma  Theta  Sorority  at  its  Annual  Conven- 
tion held  in  New  York  City. 

She  sailed  for  Cherbourg,  France  on  June  fifteenth, 
1925.  While  in  Paris  she  studied  at  the  Academie  Julian, 
The  Academie  Coloraossi  and  the  Ecole  de  Pantheon. 
Through  the  influence  of  Konrad  Bercovici  she  was  thrown 
in  contact  with  the  artist,  Frans  Masereel,  one  of  France's 
best  known  modern  painters.  M.  and  Mme.  Masereel 
offered  Miss  Bennett  the  hospitality  of  their  home  and 
together  with  their  circle  of  friends  did  much  to  encourage 
her  in  her  work  while  in  Paris.  She  returned  to  America 
during  June  1926. 

For  the  summer  of  1926  she  was  employed  at  the  Op- 


GWENDOLYN    B.    BENNETT  155 

portunity  magazine  where  she  acted  in  the  capacity  of 
Assistant  to  the  Editor.  September  1926  she  returned 
to  Howard  University  where  she  resumed  her  classroom 
work  after  a  year's  leave  of  absence. 


QUATRAINS 


Brushes  and  paints  are  all  I  have 
To  speak  the  music  in  my  soul — 
While  silently  there  laughs  at  me 
A  copper  j  ar  beside  a  pale  green  bowl. 


How  strange  that  grass  should  sing — 
Grass  is  so  still  a  thing.  .  .  . 
And  strange  the  swift  surprise  of  snow 
So  soft  it  falls  and  slow. 


SECRET 

I  shall  make  a  song  like  your  hair  .  .  . 

Goldf-woven  with  shadows  green-tinged, 

And  I  shall  play  with  my  song 

As  my  fingers  might  play  with  your  hair. 

Deep  in  my  heart 

I  shall  play  with  my  song  of  you, 


156  GWENDOLYN    B.    BENNETT 

Gently.  .  .  . 

I  shall  laugh 

At  its  sensitive  lustre  .  .  . 

I  shall  wrap  my  song  in  a  blanket, 

Blue  like  your  eyes  are  blue 

With  tiny  shots  of  silver. 

I  shall  wrap  it  caressingly, 

Tenderly.  .  .  . 

I  shall  sing  a  lullaby 

To  the  song  I  have  made 

Of  your  hair  and  eyes  .  .  . 

And  you  will  never  know 

That  deep  in  my  heart 

I  shelter  a  song  of  you 

Secretly.  .  .  . 


ADVICE 


You  were  a  sophist, 

Pale  and  quite  remote, 

As  you  bade  me 

Write  poems — 

Brown  poems 

Of  dark  words 

And  prehistoric  rhythms  •  .  • 

Your  pallor  stifled  my  poesy 

But  I  remembered  a  tapestry 

That  I  would  some  day  weave 

Of  dim  purples  and  fine  reds 


GWENDOLYN    B.    BENNETT  157 

And  blues 

Like  night  and  death — 

The  keen  precision  of  your  words 

Wove  a  silver  thread 

Through  the  dusk  softness 

Of  my  dream-stuff.  .  •  . 

TO    A   DARK    GIRL 

I  xove  you  for  your  brownness 

And  the  rounded  darkness  of  your  breast. 

I  love  you  for  the  breaking  sadness  in  your  voice 

And  shadows  where  your  wayward  eye-lids  rest. 

Something  of  old  forgotten  queens 
Lurks  in  the  lithe  abandon  of  your  walk 
And  something  of  the  shackled  slave 
Sobs  in  the  rhythm  of  your  talk. 

Oh,  little  brown  girl,  born  for  sorrow's  mate, 
Keep  all  you  have  of  queenliness, 
Forgetting  that  you  once  were  slave, 
And  let  your  full  lips  laugh  at  Fate ! 


YOUR    SONGS 

When  first  you  sang  a  song  to  me 
With  laughter  shining  from  your  eyes, 


158  GWENDOLYN    B.     BENNETT 

You  trolled  your  music  liltingly 
With  cadences  of  glad  surprise. 

In  after  years  I  heard  you  croon 
In  measures  delicately  slow 
Of  trees  turned  silver  by  the  moon 
And  nocturnes  sprites  and  lovers  know. 

And  now  I  cannot  hear  you  sing, 
But  love  still  holds  your  melody 
For  silence  is  a  sounding  thing 
To  one  who  listens  hungrily. 


FANTASY 

I  sailed  in  my  dreams  to  the  Land  of  Night 
Where  you  were  the  dusk-eyed  queen, 
And  there  in  the  pallor  of  moon-veiled  light 
The  loveliest  things  were  seen  .  .  . 

A  slim-necked  peacock  sauntered  there 

In  a  garden  of  lavender  hues, 

And  you  were  strange  with  your  purple  hair 

As  you  sat  in  your  amethyst  chair 

With  your  feet  in  your  hyacinth  shoes. 

Oh,  the  moon  gave  a  bluish  light 

Through  the  trees  in  the  land  of  dreams  and  night. 

I  stood  behind  a  bush  of  yellow-green 

And  whistled  a  song  to  the  dark-haired  queen  .  .  . 


GWENDOLYN    B.    BENNETT  159 

LINES    WRITTEN    AT    THE    GRAVE 
OF   ALEXANDER  DUMAS 

Cemeteries  are  places  for  departed  souls 

And  bones  interred, 

Or  hearts  with  shattered  loves. 

A  woman  with  lips  made  warm  for  laughter 

Would  find  grey  stones  and  roving  spirits 

Too  chill  for  living,  moving  pulses  .  .  . 

And  thou,  great  spirit,  wouldst  shiver  in  thy  granite 

shroud 
Should  idle  mirth  or  empty  talk 
Disturb  thy  tranquil  sleeping. 

A  cemetery  is  a  place  for  shattered  loves 
And  broken  hearts.  .  .  . 

Bowed  before  the  crystal  chalice  of  thy  soul, 
I  find  the  multi-colored  fragrance  of  thy  mind 
Has  lost  itself  in  Death's  transparency. 

Oh,  stir  the  lucid  waters  of  thy  sleep 
And  coin  for  me  a  tale 
Of  happy  loves  and  gems  and  joyous  limbs 
And  hearts  where  love  is  sweet ! 

A  cemetery  is  a  place  for  broken  hearts 
And  silent  thought  .  .  . 
And  silence  never  moves, 
Nor  speaks  nor  sings. 


160  GWENDOLYN    B.     BENNETT 

HATRED 

I  shall  hate  you 

Like  a  dart  of  singing  steel 

Shot  through  still  air 

At  even-tide. 

Or  solemnly 

As  pines  are  sober 

When  they  stand  etched 

Against  the  sky. 

Hating  you  shall  be  a  game 

Played  with  cool  hands 

And  slim  fingers. 

Your  heart  will  yearn 

For  the  lonely  splendor 

Of  the  pine  tree ; 

While  rekindled  fires 

In  my  eyes 

Shall  wound  you  like  swift  arrows, 

Memory  will  lay  its  hands 

Upon  your  breast 

And  you  will  understand 

My  hatred. 


SONNET 

1 

He  came  in  silvern  armour,  trimmed  with  black- 
A  lover  come  from  legends  long  ago — 


GWENDOLYN    B.    BENNETT  161 

With  silver  spurs  and  silken  plumes  a-blow, 

And  flashing  sword  caught  fast  and  buckled  back 

In  a  carven  sheath  of  Tamarack. 

He  came  with  footsteps  beautifully  slow, 

And  spoke  in  voice  meticulously  low. 

He  came  and  Romance  followed  in  his  track.  .  .  . 

I  did  not  ask  his  name — I  thought  him  Love ; 

I  did  not  care  to  see  his  hidden  face. 

All  life  seemed  born  in  my  intaken  breath; 

All  thought  seemed  flown  like  some  forgotten  dove. 

He  bent  to  kiss  and  raised  his  visor's  lace  .  .  . 

All  eager-lipped  I  kissed  the  mouth  of  Death. 


SONNET 

2 

Some  things  are  very  dear  to  me — 
Such  things  as  flowers  bathed  by  rain 
Or  patterns  traced  upon  the  sea 
Or  crocuses  where  snow  has  lain  .  .  . 
The  iridescence  of  a  gem, 
The  moon's  cool  opalescent  light, 
Azaleas  and  the  scent  of  them, 
And  honeysuckles  in  the  night. 
And  many  sounds  are  also  dear — 
Like  winds  that  sing  among  the  trees 
Or  crickets  calling  from  the  weir 
Or  Negroes  humming  melodies. 


162  GWENDOLYN    B.    BENNETT 

But  dearer  far  than  all  surmise 
Are  sudden  tear-drops  in  your  eyes. 

ARNA     BONTEMPS 

Arna  Bontemps  explains  that  he  was  just  tall  enough 
to  see  above  window  sills  when  the  first  trolley  car  came 
down  Lee  Street  in  Alexandria,  La.  His  mother,  Marie 
Pembroke,  had  been  born  in  this  same  town  but  his  father 
had  come  out  of  Marksville,  a  smaller  town  of  that 
state.  Though  exceedingly  young  and  very  frail,  Marie 
Pembroke  had  taught  school  until  her  marriage,  while  her 
husband,  Paul  Bontemps,  was  a  brick  mason,  the  son  and 
grandson  of  brick  masons. 

With  Arna  Bontemps  in  his  third  year  and  a  second 
child,  a  girl,  just  past  one,  the  family  left  the  South  for 
San  Francisco.  However,  they  stopped  in  Los  Angeles 
to  visit  relatives  and  have  never  moved  further.  Here  the 
boy's  mother  died  some  nine  years  later  and  here  his 
father  is  still  living.  Here  also  he  received  his  early  edu- 
cation in  a  rather  irregular  attendance  of  a  number  of 
schools.  He  went  through  the  schools  rapidly  enough  and 
in  spite  of  being  out  several  years  received  a  college  degree 
in  his  twentieth  year. 

In  the  year  following  that  he  lost  his  illusions  with 
reference  to  a  musical  career  and  returned  to  an  original 
intention  to  eat  bread  by  the  sweat  of  teaching  school. 
It  is  to  be  remembered  that  he  went  to  college  first  with  the 
purpose  of  taking  a  medical  course  but  it  took  him  only 
a  day  or  two  to  decide  better. 

He  lives  in  New  York  City  and  is  now  twenty-four  and 
married. 


ARNA    BONTEMPS  163 

THE    RETURN 


Once  more,  listening  to  the  wind  and  rain, 

Once  more,  you  and  I,  and  above  the  hurting  sound 

Of  these  comes  back  the  throbbing  of  remembered  rain, 

Treasured  rain  falling  on  dark  ground. 

Once  more,  huddling  birds  upon  the  leaves 

And  summer  trembling  on  a  withered  vine. 

And  once  more,  returning  out  of  pain, 

The  friendly  ghost  that  was  your  love  and  mine. 


II 


Darkness  brings  the  jungle  to  our  room: 

The  throb  of  rain  is  the  throb  of  muffled  drums. 

Darkness  hangs  our  room  with  pendulums 

Of  vine  and  in  the  gathering  gloom 

Our  walls  recede  into  a  denseness  of 

Surrounding  trees.    This  is  a  night  of  love 

Retained  from  those  lost  nights  our  fathers  slept 

In  huts ;  this  is  a  night  that  must  not  die. 

Let  us  keep  the  dance  of  rain  our  fathers  kept 

And  tread  our  dreams  beneath  the  jungle  sky. 


Ill 


And  now  the  downpour  ceases. 

Let  us  go  back  once  more  upon  the  glimmering  leaves 


164  ARNABONTEMPS 

And  as  the  throbbing  of  the  drums  increases 
Shake  the  grass  and  dripping  boughs  of  trees. 
A  dry  wind  stirs  the  palm ;  the  old  tree  grieves. 

Time  has  charged  the  years :  the  old  days  have  returned. 

Let  us  dance  by  metal  waters  burned 

With  gold  of  moon,  let  us  dance 

With  naked  feet  beneath  the  young  spice  trees. 

What  was  that  light,  that  radiance 

On  your  face? — something  I  saw  when  first 

You  passed  beneath  the  jungle  tapestries? 

A  moment  we  pause  to  quench  our  thirst 
Kneeling  at  the  water's  edge,  the  gleam 
Upon  your  face  is  plain :  you  have  wanted  this. 
Let  us  go  back  and  search  the  tangled  dream 
And  as  the  muffled  drum-beats  throb  and  miss 
Remember  again  how  early  darkness  comes 
To  dreams  and  silence  to  the  drums. 


IV 


Let  us  go  back  into  the  dusk  again, 
Slow  and  sad-like  following  the  track 
Of  blowing  leaves  and  cool  white  rain 
Into  the  old  gray  dream,  let  us  go  back. 
Our  walls  close  about  us  we  lie  and  listen 
To  the  noise  of  the  street,  the  storm  and  the  driven 
birds. 


ARNA    BONTEMPS  165 


A  question  shapes  your  lips,  your  eyes  glisten 
Retaining  tears,  but  there  are  no  more  words. 


A  BLACK  MAN  TALKS  OF 
REAPING 

I  have  sown  beside  all  waters  in  my  day. 
I  planted  deep,  within  my  heart  the  fear 
That  wind  or  fowl  would  take  the  grain  away. 
I  planted  safe  against  this  stark,  lean  year. 

I  scattered  seed  enough  to  plant  the  land 
In  rows  from  Canada  to  Mexico 
But  for  my  reaping  only  what  the  hand 
Can  hold  at  once  is  all  that  I  can  show. 

Yet  what  I  sowed  and  what  the  orchard  yields 
My  brother's  sons  are  gathering  stalk  and  root, 
Small  wonder  then  my  children  glean  in  fields 
They  have  not  sown,  and  feed  on  bitter  fruit. 


TO    A    YOUNG    GIRL    LEAVING    THE 
HILL    COUNTRY 

The  hills  are  wroth ;  the  stones  have  scored  you  bitterly 
Because  you  looked  upon  the  naked  stm 
Oblivious  of  them,  because  you  did  not  see 
The  trees  you  touched  or  mountains  that  you  walked 
upon. 


166  ARNA    BONTEMPS 

But  there  will  come  a  day  of  darkness  in  the  land, 
A  day  wherein  remembered  sun  alone  comes  through 
To  mark  the  hills ;  then  perhaps  you'll  understand 
Just  how  it  was  you  drew  from  them  and  they  from  you. 

For  there  will  be  a  bent  old  woman  in  that  day 

Who,  feeling  something  of  this  country  in  her  bones, 

Will  leave  her  house  tapping  with  a  stick,  who  will  (they 

say) 
Come  back  to  seek  the  girl  she  was  in  these  familiar 

stones. 


NOCTURNE    AT    BETHESDA 

I  thought  I  saw  an  angel  flying  low, 

I  thought  I  saw  the  flicker  of  a  wing 

Above  the  mulberry  trees ;  but  not  again. 

Bethesda  sleeps.     This  ancient  pool  that  healed 

A  host  of  bearded  Jews  does  not  awake. 

This  pool  that  once  the  angels  troubled  does  not  move. 

No  angel  stirs  it  now,  no  Saviour  comes 

With  healing  in  His  hands  to  raise  the  sick 

And  bid  the  lame  man  leap  upon  the  ground. 

The  golden  days  are  gone.    Why  do  we  wait 
So  long  upon  the  marble  steps,  blood 
Falling  from  our  open  wounds?  and  why 
Do  our  black  faces  search  the  empty  sky? 


ARNA    BONTEMP8  167 

Is  there  something  we  have  forgotten?  some  precious 

thing 
We  have  lost,  wandering  in  strange  lands  ? 

There  was  a  day,  I  remember  now, 

I  beat  my  breast  and  cried,  "Wash  me  God, 

Wash  me  with  a  wave  of  wind  upon 

The  barley ;  0  quiet  One,  draw  near,  draw  near ! 

WTalk  upon  the  hills  with  lovely  feet 

And  in  the  waterfall  stand  and  speak. 

"Dip  white  hands  in  the  lily  pool  and  mourn 

Upon  the  harps  still  hanging  in  the  trees 

Near  Babylon  along  the  river's  edge, 

But  oh,  remember  me,  I  pray,  before 

The  summer  goes  and  rose  leaves  lose  their  red." 

The  old  terror  takes  my  heart,  the  fear 
Of  quiet  waters  and  of  faint  twilights. 
There  will  be  better  days  when  I  am  gone 
And  healing  pools  where  I  cannot  be  healed. 
Fragrant  stars  will  gleam  forever  and  ever 
Above  the  place  where  I  lie  desolate. 

Yet  I  hope,  still  I  long  to  live. 
And  if  there  can  be  returning  after  death 
I  shall  come  back.    But  it  will  not  be  here ; 
If  you  want  me  you  must  search  for  me 
Beneath  the  palms  of  Africa.     Or  if 
I  am  not  there  then  you  may  call  to  me 


168  ARNA    BONTEMP8 

Across  the  shining  dunes,  perhaps  I  shall 
Be  following  a  desert  caravan. 

I  may  pass  through  centuries  of  death 

With  quiet  eyes,  but  I'll  remember  still 

A  jungle  tree  with  burning  scarlet  birds. 

There  is   something  I  have  forgotten,  some  precious 

thing. 
I  shall  be  seeking  ornaments  of  ivory, 
I  shall  be  dying  for  a  jungle  fruit. 

You  do  not  hear,  Bethesda. 
O  still  green  water  in  a  stagnant  pool! 
Love  abandoned  you  and  me  alike. 
There  was  a  day  you  held  a  rich  full  moon 
Upon  your  heart  and  listened  to  the  words 
Of  men  now  dead  and  saw  the  angels  fly. 
There  is  a  simple  story  on  your  face ; 
Years  have  wrinkled  you.     I  know,  Bethesda! 
You  are  sad.    It  is  the  same  with  me. 


LENGTH    OF   MOON 

Then  the  golden  hour 

Will  tick  its  last 

And  the  flame  will  go  down  in  the  flower. 

A  briefer  length  of  moon 

Will  mark  the  sea-line  and  the  yellow  dune. 


ARNA    BONTEMPS  169 

Then  we  may  think  of  this,  yet 
There  will  be  something  forgotten 
And  something  we  should  forget. 

It  will  be  like  all  things  we  know : 
The  stone  will  fail ;  a  rose  is  sure  to  go. 

It  will  be  quiet  then  and  we  may  stay 
As  long  at  the  picket  gate 
But  there  will  be  less  to  say. 


LANCELOT 

The  fruit  of  the  orchard  is  over-ripe,  Elaine, 
And  leaves  are  crisping  on  the  garden  wall. 
Leaves  on  the  garden  path  are  wet  and  rain 
Drips  from  the  low  shrubs  with  a  steady  fall. 

It  is  long,  so  long  since  I  was  here,  Elaine, 
Moles  have  gnawed  the  rose  tree  at  its  root ; 
You  did  not  think  that  I  would  come  again, 
Least  of  all  in  the  day  of  falling  fruit. 


GETHSEMANE 

Al:l  that  night  I  walked  alone  and  wept. 
I  tore  a  rose  and  dropped  it  on  the  ground, 
My  heart  was  lead ;  all  that  night  I  kept 
Listening  to  hear  a  dreadful  sound. 


170  ARNA    BONTEMPS 

A  tree  bent  down  and  dew  dripped  from  its  hair. 
The  earth  was  warm ;  dawn  came  solemnly. 
I  stretched  full-length  upon  the  grass  and  there 
I  said  your  name  but  silence  answered  me. 


A    TREE    DESIGN 

A  tree  is  more  than  a  shadow 

Blurred  against  the  sky, 

More  than  ink  spilled  on  the  fringe 

Of  white  clouds  floating  by. 

A  tree  is  more  than  an  April  design 

Or  a  blighted  winter  bough 

Where  love  and  music  used  to  be. 

A  tree  is  something  in  me, 

Very  still  and  lonely  now. 


BLIGHT 

I  have  seen  a  lovely  thing 

Stark  before  a  whip  of  weather : 

The  tree  that  was  so  wistful  after  spring 

Beating  barren  twigs  together. 

The  birds  that  came  there  one  by  one, 
The  sensuous  leaves  that  used  to  sway 
And  whisper  there  at  night,  all  are  gone, 
Each  has  vanished  in  its  way. 


ARNA    BONTEMPS  171 

And  this  whip  is  on  my  heart; 
There  is  no  sound  that  it  allows, 
No  little  song  that  I  may  start 
But  I  hear  the  beating  of  dead  boughs. 


THE    DAY-BREAKERS 

We  are  not  come  to  wage  a  strife 
With  swords  upon  this  hill. 

It  is  not  wise  to  waste  the  life 
Against  a  stubborn  will. 

Yet  would  we  die  as  some  have  done : 

Beating  a  way  for  the  rising  sun. 


CLOSE    YOUR    EYES  ! 

Go  through  the  gates  with  closed  eyes. 
Stand  erect  and  let  your  black  face  front  the  west. 
Drop  the  axe  and  leave  the  timber  where  it  lies ; 
A  woodman  on  the  hill  must  have  his  rest. 

Go  where  leaves  are  lying  brown  and  wet. 

Forget  her  warm  arms  and  her  breast  who  mothered 

you, 
And  every  face  you  ever  loved  forget. 
Close  your  eyes ;  walk  bravely  through. 


172  ARNA    BONTEMPS 

GOD   GIVE    TO    MEN 

God  give  the  yellow  man 

An  easy  breeze  at  blossom  time. 

Grant  his  eager,  slanting  eyes  to  cover 

Every  land  and  dream 

Of  af  terwhile. 

Give  blue-eyed  men  their  swivel  chairs 
To  whirl  in  tall  buildings. 
Allow  them  many  ships  at  sea, 
And  on  land,  soldiers 
And  policemen. 

For  black  man,  God, 

No  need  to  bother  more 

But  only  fill  afresh  his  meed 

Of  laughter, 

His  cup  of  tears. 

God  suffer  little  men 
The  taste  of  soul's  desire. 


HOMING 

Sweet  timber  land 
Where  soft  winds  blow 
The  high  green  tree 


ARNA    BONTEMPS  173 

And  fan  away  the  fog ! 
Ah  fragrant  stream 
Where  thirsty  creatures  go 
And  strong  black  men 
Hew  the  heavy  log! 

Oh  broken  house 

Crumbling  there  alone, 

Wanting  me ! 

Oh  silent  tree 

Must  I  always  be 

A  wild  bird 

Riding  the  wind 

And  screaming  bitterly  ? 


GOLGOTHA   IS    A   MOUNTAIN 

Golgotha  is  a  mountain,  a  purple  mound 
Almost  out  of  sight. 

One  night  they  hanged  two  thieves  there, 
And  another  man. 

Some  women  wept  heavily  that  night ; 
Their  tears  are  flowing  still.    They  have  made  a  river ; 
Once  it  covered  me. 

Then  the  people  went  away  and  left  Golgotha 
Deserted. 

Oh,  I've  seen  many  mountains: 

Pale  purple  mountains  melting  in  the  evening  mists  and 
blurring  on  the  borders  of  the  sky. 


174  ARNABONTEMPS 

I  climbed  old  Shasta  and  chilled  my  hands  in  its  summer 

snows. 
I  rested  in  the  shadow  of  Popocatepetl  and  it  whispered 

to  me  of  daring  prowess. 
I  looked  upon  the  Pyrenees  and  felt  the  zest  of  warm 

exotic  nights. 
I  slept  at  the  foot  of  Fujiyama  and  dreamed  of  legend 

and  of  death. 
And  I've  seen  other  mountains  rising  from  the  wistful 

moors  like  the  breasts  of  a  slender  maiden. 
Who  knows  the  mystery  of  mountains ! 
Some  of  them  are  awful,  others  are  just  lonely. 


Italy  has  its  Rome  and  California  has  San  Francisco, 

All  covered  with  mountains. 

Some  think  these  mountains  grew 

Like  ant  hills 

Or  sand  dunes. 

That  might  be  so — 

I  wonder  what  started  them  all ! 

Babylon  is  a  mountain 

And  so  is  Ninevah, 

With  grass  growing  on  them ; 

Palaces  and  hanging  gardens  started  them. 

I  wonder  what  is  under  the  hills 

In  Mexico 

And  Japan! 

There  are  mountains  in  Africa  too. 


ARNA    BONTEMPS  175 

Treasure  is  buried  there : 

Gold  and  precious  stones 

And  moulded  glory. 

Lush  grass  is  growing  there 

Sinking  before  the  wind. 

Black  men  are  bowing. 

Naked  in  that  grass 

Digging  with  their  fingers. 

I  am  one  of  them: 

Those  mountains  should  be  ours. 

It  would  be  great 

To  touch  the  pieces  of  glory  with  our  hands. 

These  mute  unhappy  hills, 

Bowed  down  with  broken  backs, 

Speak  often  one  to  another: 

"A  day  is  as  a  year,"  they  cry, 

"And  a  thousand  years  as  one  day." 

We  watched  the  caravan 

That  bore  our  queen  to  the  courts  of  Solomon ; 

And  when  the  first  slave  traders  came 

We  bowed  our  heads. 

"Oh,  Brothers,  it  is  not  long! 

Dust  shall  yet  devour  the  stones 

But  we  shall  be  here  when  they  are  gone." 

Mountains  are  rising  all  around  me. 

Some  are  so  small  they  are  not  seen ; 

Others  are  large. 

All  of  them  get  big  in  time  and  people  forget 

What  started  them  at  first. 


176  ARNA    BONTEMPS 

Oh  the  world  is  covered  with  mountains ! 
Beneath  each  one  there  is  something  buried: 
Some  pile  of  wreckage  that  started  it  there. 
Mountains  are  lonely  and  some  are  awful. 


One  day  I  will  crumble. 

They'll  cover  my  heap  with  dirt  and  that  will  make  a 

mountain. 
I  think  it  will  be  Golgotha. 


ALBERT     RICE 

I  am  a  native  of  our  Capital  City,  born  in  the  Mauve 
Decade  (1903).  My  schooling  has  been  in  the  Washing- 
ton grammar  and  high  schools.  It  was  while  a  student  at 
Dunbar  High  School  that  I  felt  a  restless  urge  to  write 
something  other  than  dull  formal  paragraphs  in  English. 
I  made  several  attempts  at  verse  but  found  them  so  poor 
that  I  hastily  put  such  ideas  behind  me. 

After  leaving  high  school  I  entered  the  government  serv- 
ice in  Washington,  but  my  radical  views  could  not  be- 
come reconciled  to  the  conservative  bourgeoise  ideals 
around  me;  so  I  left  the  government  service  and  journeyed 
to  New  York  in  the  winter  of  1926.  Here  I  served  an 
apprenticeship  in  literary  vagabondage  with  the  bizarre 
and  eccentric  young  vagabond  poet  of  High  Harlem, 
Richard  Bruce.  It  was  here  that  I  felt  inspired  to  write 
"The  Black  Madonna."  I  was  one  evening  at  vespers 
down  at  St.  Mary's  the  Virgin,  and  while  lost  in  con- 
templation before  Our  Lady,  I  thought  of  a  Madonna  of 
swart  skin,  a  Madonna  of  dark  mien. 


ALBERT    RICE  177 

Despite  my  radicalism  I  am  religious.  I  admire  the 
socialist  form  of  government,  and  my  favorite  poet  is 
Claude  McKay.  And  some  day  I  hope  to  flee  the  shores 
of  this  exquisite  hell.  My  temperament  is  Latin.  I  abhor 
all  things  Anglo-Saxon.  I'd  rather  live  in  the  squalor 
of  Mulberry  Street,  N.  Y.  (Little  Italy)  than  at  Irving- 
ton-on-the-Hudson.  I  love  bull  fights  and  dislike  baseball 
games.  I  like  dancing  and  dislike  prayer  meetings.  I 
love  New  York  because  it  is  crowded  and  noisy  and  an 
outpost  of  Europe.  Of  my  home  here  in  Washington  I 
have  not  much  to  offer.  I  like  Washington  because  it 
has  such  a  large  share  of  Babbitts,  both  white  and  black. 
And  I  like  it  because  Georgia  Douglas  Johnson  lives  there 
and  on  Saturday  nights  has  an  assembly  of  likable  and 
civilized  people,  and  because  it  was  from  this  Saturday 
night  circle  that  Jean  Toomer,  Richard  Bruce,  and  Richard 
Goodwin,  the  artist,  went  forth  to  fame  and  infamy. 


THE  BLACK  MADONNA 

Not  as  the  white  nations 
know  thee 
O  Mother! 

But  swarthy  of  cheek 
and  full-lipped  as  the 
child  races  are. 

Yet  thou  art  she, 

the  Immaculate  Maid, 
and  none  other, 


178  ALBERT    RICE 

Crowned  in  the  stable 
at  Bethlehem, 

hailed  of  the  star. 

See  where  they  come, 
thy  people, 

so  humbly  appealing, 

From  the  ancient  lands 
where  the  olden  faiths 
had  birth. 

Tired  dusky  hands 
uplifted  for  thy 
healing. 

Pity  them,  Mother, 

the  untaught 

of  earth. 


COUNTEE    CULLEN  179 

COUNTEE    CULLEN 

Born  in  New  York  City,  May  30,  1903,  and  reared  in 
the  conservative  atmosphere  of  a  Methodist  parsonage, 
Countee  Cullen's  chief  problem  has  been  that  of  recon- 
ciling a  Christian  upbringing  with  a  pagan  inclination. 
His  life  so  far  has  not  convinced  him  that  the  problem  is 
insoluble.  Educated  in  the  elementary  and  high  schools 
of  New  York  City,  with  an  A.B.  degree  and  a  Phi  Beta 
Kappa  Key  from  New  York  University,  an  M.A.  from 
Harvard,  arrantly  opposed  to  any  form  of  enforced  racial 
segregation,  he  finds  it  a  matter  of  growing  regret  that 
no  part  of  his  academic  education  has  been  drawn  from 
a  racial  school.  As  a  poet  he  is  a  rank  conservative,  lov- 
ing the  measured  line  and  the  skillful  rhyme ;  but  not  blind 
to  the  virtues  of  those  poets  who  will  not  be  circumscribed ; 
and  he  is  thankful  indeed  for  the  knowledge  that  should 
he  ever  desire  to  go  adventuring,  the  world  is  rife  with 
paths  to  choose  from.  He  has  said,  perhaps  with  a  reitera- 
tion sickening  to  some  of  his  friends,  that  he  wishes  any 
merit  that  may  be  in  his  work  to  flow  from  it  solely  as  the 
expression  of  a  poet — with  no  racial  consideration  to  bol- 
ster it  up.  He  is  still  of  the  same  thought.  At  present  he 
is  employed  as  Assistant  Editor  of  Opportunity,  A  Journal 
of  Negro  Life. 

His  published  works  are  Color,  The  Ballad  of  the  Brown 
Girl,  and  Copper  Sun. 


LINES   TO  OUR  ELDERS 


You  too  listless  to  examine 
If  in  pestilence  or  famine 
Death  lurk  least,  a  hungry  gamin 


180  COUNTEE    CULLEN 

Gnawing  on  you  like  a  beaver 
On  a  root,  while  you  trifle 
Time  away  nodding  in  the  sun, 
Careless  how  the  shadows  crawl 
Surely  up  your  crumbling  wall, 
Heedless  of  the  Thief's  footfall, 
Death's,  whose  nimble  fingers  rifle 
Your  heartbeats  one  by  weary  one, — 
Here's  the  difference  in  our  dying: 
You  go  dawdling,  we  go  flying. 
Here's  a  thought  flung  out  to  plague  you 
Ours  the  pleasure  if  we'd  liever 
Burn  completely  with  the  fever 
Than  go  ambling  with  the  ague. 


I   HAVE   A   RENDEZVOUS   WITH 
LIFE 

(With  apologies  to  the  memory  of  Alan  Seeger) 

I  have  a  rendezvous  with  Life 

In  days  I  hope  will  come 

Ere  youth  has  sped  and  strength  of  mind, 

Ere  voices  sweet  grown  dumb ; 

I  have  a  rendezvous  with  Life 

When  Spring's  first  heralds  hum. 

It  may  be  I  shall  greet  her  soon, 

Shall  riot  at  her  behest ; 


COUNTEE    CULLEN  181 

It  may  be  I  shall  seek  in  vain 

The  peace  of  her  downy  breast ; 

Yet  I  would  keep  this  rendezvous, 

And  deem  all  hardships  sweet, 

If  at  the  end  of  the  long  white  way, 

There  Life  and  I  shall  meet. 

Sure  some  will  cry  it  better  far 

To  crown  their  days  in  sleep, 

Than  face  the  wind,  the  road,  and  rain, 

To  heed  the  falling  deep; 

Though  wet,  nor  blow,  nor  space  I  fear, 

Yet  fear  I  deeply,  too, 

Lest  Death  shall  greet  and  claim  me  ere 

I  keep  Life's  rendezvous. 


PROTEST 

I  long  not  now,  a  little  while  at  least, 

For  that  serene  interminable  hour 

When  I  shall  leave  this  barmecidal  feast, 

With  poppy  for  my  everlasting  flower. 

I  long  not  now  for  that  dim  cubicle 

Of  earth  to  which  my  lease  will  not  expire, 

Where  he  who  comes  a  tenant  there  may  dwell 

Without  a  thought  of  famine,  flood,  or  fire. 

Surely  that  house  has  quiet  to  bestow: 

Still  tongue,  spent  pulse,  heart  pumped  of  its  last  throb, 

The  fingers  tense  and  tranquil  in  a  row, 


182  COUNTEE    CULLEN 

The  throat  unwcllcd  with  any  sigh  or  sob. 
But  time  to  live,  to  love,  bear  pain  and  smile, 
Oh,  we  are  given  such  a  little  while ! 


YET    DO    I    MARVEL 

I  doubt  not  God  is  good,  well-meaning,  kind, 
And  did  he  stoop  to  quibble  could  tell  why 
The  little  buried  mole  continues  blind, 
Why  flesh  that  mirrors  him  must  some  day  die, 
Make  plain  the  reason  tortured  Tantalus 
Is  baited  with  the  fickle  fruit,  declare 
If  merely  brute  caprice  dooms  Sisyphus 
To  struggle  up  a  never-ending  stair. 

Inscrutable  His  ways  are  and  immune 
To  catechism  by  a  mind  too  strewn 
With  petty  cares  to  slightly  understand 
What  awful  brain  compels  His  awful  hand; 
Yet  do  I  marvel  at  this  curious  thing: 
To  make  a  poet  black,  and  bid  him  sing ! 


TO  LOVERS  OF  EARTH:  FAIR 
WARNING 

Give  over  to  high  things  the  fervent  thought 
You  waste  on  Earth;  let  down  the  righteous  bar 


COUNTEECULLEN  183 

Against  a  wayward  peace  too  dearly  bought 
Upon  this  pale  and  passion-frozen  star. 
Sweethearts  and  friends,  are  they  not  loyal?    Far 
More  fickle,  false,  perverse,  far  more  unkind, 
Is  Earth  to  those  who  give  her  heart  and  mind. 

And  you  whose  lusty  youth  her  snares  intrigue, 
Who  glory  in  her  seas,  swear  by  her  clouds, 
With  Age,  man's  foe>  Earth  ever  is  in  league. 
Time  resurrects  her  even  while  he  crowds 
Your  bloom  to  dust,  and  lengthens  out  your  shrouds 
A  day's  length  or  a  year's.     She  will  be  young 
When  your  last  cracked  and  quivering  note  is  sung. 

She  will  remain  the  Earth,  sufficient  still 
Though  you  are  gone,  and  with  you  that  rare  loss 
That  vanishes  with  your  bewildered  will; 
And  there  shall  flame  no  red,  indignant  cross 
For  you,  no  quick  white  scar  of  wrath  emboss 
The  sky,  no  blood  drip  from  a  wounded  moon, 
And  not  a  single  star  chime  out  of  tune. 


FROM   THE    DARK    TOWER 

We  shall  not  always  plant  while  others  reap 
The  golden  increment  of  bursting  fruit, 
Not  always  countenance,  abject  and  mute, 
That  lesser  men  should  hold  their  brothers  cheap ; 
Not  everlastingly  while  others  sleep 


184  COUNTEE    CULLEN 

Shall  wc  beguile  their  limbs  with  mellow  flute, 
Not  always  bend  to  some  more  subtle  brute; 
We  were  not  made  eternally  to  weep. 

The  night  whose  sable  breast  relieves  the  stark 
White  stars  is  no  less  lovely,  being  dark; 
And  there  are  buds  that  cannot  bloom  at  all 
In  light,  but  crumple,  piteous,  and  fall; 
So  in  the  dark  we  hide  the  heart  that  bleeds, 
And  wait,  and  tend  our  agonizing  seeds. 


TO    JOHN    KEATS,    POET,    AT 
SPRINGTIME 

I  cannot  hold  my  peace,  John  Keats ; 

There  never  was  a  spring  like  this ; 

It  is  an  echo,  that  repeats 

My  last  year's  song  and  next  year's  bliss. 

I  know,  in  spite  of  all  men  say 

Of  Beauty,  you  have  felt  her  most. 

Yea,  even  in  your  grave  her  way 

Is  laid.     Poor,  troubled,  lyric  ghost, 

Spring  never  was  so  fair  and  dear 

As  Beauty  makes  her  seem  this  year. 

I  cannot  hold  my  peace,  John  Keats ; 
I  am  as  helpless  in  the  toil 
Of  Spring  as  any  lamb  that  bleats 
To  feel  the  solid  earth  recoil 


COUNTEE    CULLEN  185 

Beneath  his  puny  legs.     Spring  beats 
Her  tocsin  call  to  those  who  love  her, 
And  lo !  the  dogwood  petals  cover 
Her  breast  with  drifts  of  snow,  and  sleek 
White  gulls  fly  screaming  to  her,  and  hover 
About  her  shoulders,  and  kiss  her  cheek, 
While  white  and  purple  lilacs  muster 
A  strength  that  bears  them  to  a  cluster 
Of  color  and  odor;  for  her  sake 
All  things  that  slept  are  now  awake. 

And  you  and  I,  shall  we  lie  still, 

John  Keats,  while  Beauty  summons  us  ? 

Somehow  I  feel  your  sensitive  will 

Is  pulsing  up  some  tremulous 

Sap  road  of  a  maple  tree,  whose  leaves 

Grow  music  as  they  grow,  since  your 

Wild  voice  is  in  them,  a  harp  that  grieves 

For  life  that  opens  death's  dark  door. 

Though  dust,  your  fingers  still  can  push 

The  Vision  Splendid  to  a  birth, 

Though  now  they  work  as  grass  in  the  hush 

Of  the  night  on  the  broad  sweet  page  of  the  earth. 

"John  Keats  is  dead,"  they  say,  but  I 
Who  hear  your  full  insistent  cry 
In  bud  and  blossom,  leaf  and  tree, 
Know  John  Keats  still  writes  poetry. 
And  while  my  head  is  earthward  bowed 
To  read  new  life  sprung  from  your  shroud, 


186  COUNTEE    CULL  EN 

Folks  seeing  me  must  think  it  strange 
That  merely  spring  should  so  derange 
My  mind.     They  do  not  know  that  you, 
John  Keats,  keep  revel  with  me,  too. 


FOUR    EPITAPHS 

1 

For  My  Grandmother 

This  lovely  flower  fell  to  seed; 
Work  gently  sun  and  rain ; 
She  held  it  as  her  dying  creed 
That  she  would  grow  again. 

2 

For  John  Keats,  Apostle  of  Beauty 

Not  writ  in  water  nor  in  mist, 

Sweet  lyric  throat,  thy  name. 

Thy  singing  lips  that  cold  death  kissed 

Have  seared  his  own  with  flame. 

3 

For  Paul  Laurence  Dunbar 

Born  of  the  sorrowful  of  heart 
Mirth  was  a  crown  upon  his  head; 


COUNTEECULLEN  187 

Pride  kept  his  twisted  lips  apart 
In  jest,  to  hide  a  heart  that  bled. 

4 
For  a  Lady  I  Know 

She  even  thinks  that  up  in  heaven 

Her  class  lies  late  and  snores, 
While  poor  black  cherubs  rise  at  seven 

To  do  celestial  chores. 


INCIDENT 

Once  riding  in  old  Baltimore, 

Heart-filled,  head-filled  with  glee, 

I  saw  a  Baltimorean 

Keep  looking  straight  at  me. 

Now  I  was  eight  and  very  small, 

And  he  was  no  whit  bigger, 
And  so  I  smiled,  but  he  poked  out 

His  tongue  and  called  me,  "Nigger.5 

I  saw  the  whole  of  Baltimore 
From  May  until  December : 

Of  all  the  things  that  happened  there 
That's  all  that  I  remember. 


188        DONALD  JEFFREY  HAYES 

DONALD     JEFFREY     HAYES 

Donald  Jeffrey  Hayes  was  born  November  16,  1904,  in 
Raleigh,  N.  C.  At  the  age  of  five  his  parents  brought  him 
to  Atlantic  City,  N.  J.,  where  he  attended  the  public 
schools  through  the  freshman  year  of  High  School.  In 
1913  he  moved  with  his  family  to  Pleasantville,  N.  J., 
where  in  his  sophomore  year  of  High  School  he  was 
awarded,  after  a  near  student  strike,  court  action  and  the 
dismissal  of  a  member  of  the  faculty — the  highest  debating 
honors.  Following  this  unpleasantness,  he  went  to  Chicago 
where  he  studied  privately  the  forms  of  poetry  while  com- 
pleting his  High  School  work.  He  graduated  in  1926  from 
Englewood  an  honor  student,  and  distinguished,  as  it  were, 
as  "The  poet  of  Englewood"  and  "The  Bronze  God"  as  his 
fellow  students  dubbed  him. 

He  is  at  present  planning  a  volume  of  his  verse  and 
studying  the  voice,  planning  to  make  his  career  in  the 
concert  field. 

INSCRIPTION 

He  wrote  upon  his  heart 

As  on  the  door  of  some  dark  ancient  house: 

Who  once  lived  here  has  long  been  dead 

As  dead  as  moss-grown  stone 

Only  a  ghost  inhabits  here 

One  that  would  be  alone 

Only  a  ghost  inhabits  here 

A  ghost  without  desire 

Who  sits  before  a  shadowed  hearth 

And  warms  to  a  spectral  fire 


DONALD  JEFFREY  HAYES       189 

AUF    WIEDERSEHEN 

I  shalx,  come  this  way  again 

On  some  distant  morrow 
When  the  red  and  golden  leaves 

Have  fallen  on  my  sorrow  .  .  .    ! 

I  shall  come  this  way  again 

When  this  day  is  rotten 
In  the  grave  of  yesterdays 

And  this  hour  forgotten.  .  .  .    ! 

I  shall  come  this  way  again 

Before  the  lamp  light  dies 
To  comfort  you  and  dry  the  tear 

Of  penance  from  your  eyes.  .  .  .    ! 

NIGHT 

Night  like  purple  flakes  of  snow 

Falls  with  ease 

Catching  on  the  roofs  of  houses 

In  the  tops  of  trees 

Down  upon  the  distant  grass 

And  the  distant  flower 

It  will  drift  into  this  room 

In  an  hour 


190        DONALD  JEFFREY  HAYES 

CONFESSION 

She  kneeled  before  me  begging 
That  I  should  with  a  prayer 

Give  her  absolution 

(How  golden  was  her  hair!) 

She  begged  an  absolution 
While  the  moments  fled 

She  thought  my  tears  were  pity 
(My  soul  her  lips  were  red !) 

She  begged  of  me  forgiveness 

God  you  understand 
(For  pale  and  soft  and  slender 

Was  her  dainty  hand!) 

She  begged  that  I  should  pray  You 
That  her  Soul  might  rest 

But  I  could  not  pray  O  Master 
(Ivory  was  her  breast!) 

NOCTURNE 

Softly  blow  lightly 
O  twilight  breeze 
Scarcely  bend  slightly 
O  silver  trees: 


DONALD  JEFFREY  HAYES       191 

Night  glides  slowly  down  hill  .  .  down  stream 

Bringing  a  myriad  star- twinkling  dream 

Softly  blow  lightly 

O  twilight  breeze 

Scarcely  bend  slightly 

O  silver  trees : 

Night  will  spill  sleep  in  your  day  weary  eye 

While  a  soft  yellow  moon  steals  down  the  sky.  .  .  • 

Softly  blow 

Scarcely  bend 

So  ....    ! 

Lullaby 


AFTER    ALL 

After  all  and  after  all 
When  the  song  is  sung 
And  swallowed  up  in  silence 
It  were  more  real  unsung.  .  , 

After  all  and  after  all 
When  the  lips  have  stirred 
Such  a  little  of  the  thought 
Is  transmuted  in  the  word.   . 


Suffer  not  my  ears  with  hearing 
Suffer  not  your  thoughts  with  speech. 
Let  us  feel  into  our  meaning 
And  thus  know  the  all  of  each. 


198       .JONATHAN     HENDERSON     BROOKS 

JONATHAN  HENDERSON  BROOKS 

I  was  born  on  a  farm  twelve  miles  southwest  of  Lex- 
ington, Mississippi,  in  1904.  When  I  was  eleven  years 
old  our  family  was  disunited  by  divorce.  My  three  sisters 
and  only  brother  went  with  father  while  I  chose  to  become 
my  mother's  "little  ploughman. "  We  worked  around  on 
"half  shares"  in  the  community  of  my  birth  until  I  was 
fourteen,  and  then  my  mother,  who  had  managed  some- 
how to  save  enough  money  to  keep  me  in  school  for  four 
months,  sent  me  to  Jackson  College.  It  was  here  that  I 
received  my  first  material  recognition  for  writing  when 
I  was  awarded  the  first  prize  in  a  local  contest  for  my 
first  story,  entitled  "The  Bible  In  The  Cotton  Field." 
Mother's  plan  was  to  send  me  back  to  Jackson  College 
again  the  following  year,  but  the  white  landlord  took  her 
entire  crop  of  four  bales  to  cover  the  land  rent  of  my 
uncle  with  whom  we  had  gone  to  live  in  Humphreys 
County  that  year. 

My  formal  education  has  been  interrupted  more  than 
once  by  periods  of  farming  and  teaching.  I  moved  up 
my  years  and  taught  two  five-months  sessions  in  Hum- 
phreys County  before  I  finished  my  high  school  work.  In 
the  fall  of  1923  I  matriculated  at  Lincoln  University, 
Missouri,  and  graduated  from  its  high  school  department 
in  June  1925  with  salutatory  honors.  Lincoln  was  very 
kind  to  me  during  those  two  years — the  happiest  I  have 
known  in  all  my  life.  It  gave  me  work  enough  to  cover 
my  expenses  while  attending  there,  twice  chose  me  the 
president  of  my  class,  and  bestowed  upon  me  each  of  the 
three  first  prizes  it  offers  in  the  high  school  department, 
besides  electing  me  class  poet  and  giving  me  a  host  of 
staunch  friends. 

I  am  now  pursuing  my  college  work  at  Tougaloo  Col- 


JONATHAN    HENDERSON    BROOKS        193 

lege  and  am  part  time  pastor  of  the  second  Baptist  Church 
of  Kosciusko,  Mississippi. 


THE    RESURRECTION 

His  friends  went  off  and  left  Him  dead 
In  Joseph's  subterranean  bed, 
Embalmed  with  myrrh  and  sweet  aloes, 
And  wrapped  in  snow-white  burial  clothes. 

Then  shrewd  men  came  and  set  a  seal 
Upon  His  grave,  lest  thieves  should  steal 
His  lifeless  form  away,  and  claim 
For  Him  an  undeserving  fame. 

"There  is  no  use,"  the  soldiers  said, 
"Of  standing  sentries  by  the  dead." 
Wherefore,  they  drew  their  cloaks  around 
Themselves,  and  fell  upon  the  ground, 
And  slept  like  dead  men,  all  night  through, 
In  the  pale  moonlight  and  chilling  dew. 

A  muffled  whiff  of  sudden  breath 
Ruffled  the  passive  air  of  death. 

He  woke,  and  raised  Himself  in  bed ; 

Recalled  how  He  was  crucified; 
Touched  both  hands'  fingers  to  His  head, 

And  lightly  felt  His  fresh-healed  side. 


194  JONATHAN  HENDERSON  BROOKS 

Then  with  a  deep,  triumphant  sigh, 
He  coolly  put  His  grave-clothes  by — 
Folded  the  sweet,  white  winding  sheet, 
The  toweling,  the  linen  bands, 
The  napkin,  all  with  careful  hands — 
And  left  the  borrowed  chamber  neat. 

His  steps  were  like  the  breaking  day: 
So  soft  across  the  watch  He  stole, 
He  did  not  wake  a  single  soul, 

Nor  spill  one  dewdrop  by  the  way. 

Now  Calvary  was  loveliness : 
Lilies  that  flowered  thereupon 

Pulled  off  the  white  moon's  pallid  dress, 
And  put  the  morning's  vesture  on. 

"Why  seek  the  living  among  the  dead? 
He  is  not  here,"  the  angel  said. 

The  early  winds  took  up  the  words, 
And  bore  them  to  the  lilting  birds, 
The  leafing  trees,  and  everything 
That  breathed  the  living  breath  of  spring. 


JONATHAN    HENDERSON    BROOKS       195 

THE  LAST  QUARTER  MOON  OF 
THE  DYING  YEAR 

The  last  quarter  moon  of  the  dying  year, 

Pendant  behind  a  naked  cottonwood  tree 

On  a  frosty,  dawning  morning 

With  the  back  of  her  silver  head 

Turned  to  the  waking  sun. 

Quiet  like  the  waters 

Of  Galilee 

After  the  Lord  had  bid  them 

"Peace,  be  still." 

O  silent  beauty,  indescribable ! 

Dead,  do  they  say? 

Would  God  that  I  shall  seem 

So  beautiful  in  death. 


PAEAN 

Across  the  dewy  lawn  she  treads 

Before  the  sun  awakes 
While  lush,  green  grasses  bow  their  heads 

To  kiss  the  tracks  she  makes. 


The  violets,  in  clusters,  stand 
And  stare  her  beauty  through, 

And  seem  so  happy  in  her  hand, 
They  know  not  what  to  do. 


1!)()   JONATHAN  HENDERSON  BROOKS 

She  must  have  come  whence  zephyrs  blow, 
From  sprites'  or  angels'  lands ; 

Her  heart  is  meet  for  God  to  know — 
Oh,  heaven  is  where  she  stands ! 


GLADYS     MAY     CASELY     HAYFORD 

"I  was  born  at  Axim  on  the  African  Gold  Coast  in  1904 
on  the  11th  of  May  to  singularly  cultured  and  intellectual 
parents,  my  mother  being  one  of  the  daughters  of  Judge 
Smith,  the  first  Judge  of  the  Excomission  Court  of  Sierra 
Leone,  and  my  father  being  one  of  the  three  pioneer  law- 
yers of  the  Gold  Coast. 

I  am  a  Fanti,  of  the  Fanti  tribe  which  spreads  from 
Axim  right  down  the  Gold  Coast,  to  Acera,  and  is  sub- 
divided into  groups  speaking  different  dialects.  It  is  said 
that  the  Acera  branch,  at  one  time,  wandered  away  from 
the  main  body  and  eventually  arrived  also  at  the  sea  coast, 
speaking  another  tongue,  but  retaining  the  same  customs. 

I  spent  five  years  in  England,  three  of  which  were  spent 
in  school.  I  went  to  Penrohs  College,  Colwyn  Bay  in 
Wales,  and  on  my  return  home  became  a  school  teacher 
in  The  Girls  Vocational  School,  Sierra  Leone. 

By  twenty,  I  had  the  firm  conviction  that  I  was  meant 
to  write  for  Africa.  This  was  accentuated  by  the  help 
which  our  boys  and  girls  need  so  much  and  fired  by  the 
determination  to  show  those  who  are  prejudiced  against 
colour,  that  we  deny  inferiority  to  them,  spiritually,  in- 
tellectually and  morally;  and  to  prove  it. 

I  argued  that  the  first  thing  to  do,  was  to  imbue  our 
own  people  with  the  idea  of  their  own  beauty,  superiority 
and  individuality,  with  a  love  and  admiration  for  our  own 
country,  which  has  been  systematically  suppressed.     Con- 


GLADYS    MAY    CASELY    HAYFORD        197 

sequently  I  studied  the  beautiful  points  of  Negro  phys- 
ique, texture  of  skin,  beauty  of  hair,  soft  sweetness  of 
eyes,  charm  of  curves,  so  that  none  should  think  it  a 
shame  to  be  black,  but  rather  a  glorious  adventure/' 


NATIVITY 

Within  a  native  hut,  ere  stirred  the  dawn, 

Unto  the  Pure  One  was  an  Infant  born 

Wrapped  in  blue  lappah  that  his  mother  dyed. 

Laid  on  his  father's  home-tanned  deer-skin  hide 

The  babe  still  slept  by  all  things  glorified. 

Spirits  of  black  bards  burst  their  bonds  and  sang, 

"Peace  upon  earth"  until  the  heavens  rang. 

All  the  black  babies  who  from  earth  had  fled, 

Peeped  through  the  clouds,  then  gathered  round  His 

head. 
Telling  of  things  a  baby  needs  to  do, 
When  first  he  opens  his  eyes  on  wonders  new ; 
Telling  Him  that  to  sleep  was  sweeter  rest, 
All  comfort  came  from  His  black  mother's  breast. 
Their  gifts  were  of  Love  caught  from  the  springing  sod, 
Whilst  tears  and  laughter  were  the  gifts  of  God. 
Then  all  the  wise  men  of  the  past  stood  forth 
Filling  the  air  East,  West,  and  South  and  North ; 
And  told  him  of  the  joys  that  wisdom  brings 
To  mortals  in  their  earthly  wanderings. 
The  children  of  the  past  shook  down  each  bough, 
Wreathed  Frangepani  blossoms  for  His  brow ; 
They  put  pink  lilies  in  His  mother's  hand, 


198         GLADYS    MAY    CASELY     HAYFORD 

And  heaped  for  both  the  first  fruits  of  the  land. 
His  father  cut  some  palm  fronds  that  the  air 
Be  coaxed  to  zephyrs  while  He  rested  there. 
Birds  trilled  their  hallelujahs;  and  the  dew 
Trembled  with  laughter  till  the  babe  laughed  too. 
All  the  black  women  brought  their  love  so  wise, 
And  kissed  their  motherhood  into  his  mother's  eyes. 


Note:  lappah — a  straight  woven  cloth  tied  round  the  waist  to  form 
skirt. 
Frangepani — An  African  flower. 


RAINY  SEASON  LOVE  SONG 

Out  of  the  tense  awed  darkness,  my  Frangepani  comes ; 
Whilst  the  blades  of  Heaven  flash  round  her,  and  the 

roll  of  thunder  drums 
My  young  heart  leaps  and  dances,  with  exquisite  joy 

and  pain, 
As  storms  within  and  storms  without  I  meet  my  love  in 

the  rain. 

"The  rain  is  in  love  with  you  darling;  it's  kissing  you 

everywhere, 
Rain  pattering  over  your  small  brown  feet,  rain  in  your 

curly  hair ; 
Rain  in  the  vale  that  your  twin  breasts  make,  as  in 

delicate  mounds  they  rise, 
I  hope  there  is  rain  in  your  heart,  Frangepani,  as  rain 

half  fills  your  eyes." 


GLADYS    MAY    CASELY    HAYFORD        199 

Into  my  hands  she  cometh,  and  the  lightning  of  my 

desire 
Flashes  and  leaps  about  her,  more  subtle  than  Heaven's 

fire; 
"The  lightning's  in  love  with  you  darling;  it  is  loving 

you  so  much, 
That  its  warm  electricity  in  you  pulses  wherever  I  may 

touch. 
When  I  kiss  your  lips  and  your  eyes,  and  your  hands 

like  twin  flowers  apart, 
I   know   there  is   lightning,   Frangepani,   deep   in   the 

depths  of  your  heart." 

The  thunder  rumbles  about  us,  and  I  feel  its  triumphant 

note 
As  your  warm  arms  steal  around  me ;  and  I  kiss  your 

dusky  throat ; 
"The  thunder's  in  love  with  you  darling.     It  hides  its 

power  in  your  breast. 
And  I  feel  it  stealing  o'er  me  as  I  lie  in  your  arms  at 

rest. 
I  sometimes  wonder,  beloved,  when  I  drink  from  life's 

proffered  bowl, 
Whether  there's  thunder  hidden  in  the  innermost  parts 

of  your  soul." 

Out  of  my  arms  she  stealeth ;  and  I  am  left  alone  with 

the  night, 
Void  of  all  sounds  save  peace,  the  first  faint  glimmer 

of  light. 


200        GLADYS    MAY    CASELY     IIAYFORD 

Into  the  quiet,  hushed  stillness  my  Frangepani  goes. 
Is  there  peace  within  like  the  peace  without?     Only  the 
darkness  knows. 


THE    SERVING    GIRL 

The   calabash  wherein  she  served  my  food, 

Was  smooth  and  polished  as  sandalwood: 

Fish,  as  white  as  the  foam  of  the  sea, 

Peppered,  and  golden  fried  for  me. 

She  brought  palm  wine  that  carelessly  slips 

From  the  sleeping  palm  tree's  honeyed  lips. 

But  who  can  guess,  or  even  surmise 

The  countless  things  she  served  with  her  eyes  ? 


BABY    COBINA 

Brown  Baby  Cobina,  with  his  large  black  velvet  eyes, 
His  little  coos  of  ecstacies,  his  gurgling  of  surprise, 
With  brass  bells  on  his  ankles,  that  laugh  where'er  he 

goes, 
It's  so  rare  for  bells  to  tinkle,  above  brown  dimpled 

toes. 

Brown  Baby  Cobina  is  so  precious  that  we  fear 
Something  might  come  and  steal  him,  when  we  grown- 
ups are  not  near; 


GLADYS    MAY    CASELY    HAYFORD        201 

So  we  tied  bells  on  his  ankles,  and  kissed  on  them  this 

charm — 
"Bells,  guard  our  Baby  Cobina  from  all  devils  and  all 

harm." 


LUCY     ARIEL     WILLIAMS 

Lucy  Ariel  Williams  was  born  in  Mobile,  Alabama, 
March  3,  1905.  Her  parents,  Dr.  and  Mrs.  H.  Roger 
Williams  surrounded  her  with  the  aesthetic  and  cultural 
environment  usually  given  the  only  daughters  in  profes- 
sional homes  in  the  South.  Miss  Williams  is  well  known 
as  a  modiste,  poet  and  extremely  talented  pianist.  Her 
early  training  was  acquired  at  Emerson  Institute,  Mobile, 
Alabama.  Later  she  was  graduated  from  Talladega  Col- 
lege and  Fisk  University,  after  which  she  attended  Ober- 
lin  Conservatory  of  Music,  Oberlin,  Ohio.  Although  a 
first  year  student  there,  she  received  third  year  classifica- 
tion, being  the  first  member  of  her  race  to  be  so  honored. 
Her  work  has  appeared  in  Opportunity  and  other  journals. 
Her  poem  "Northboun'  "  received  first  prize  in  the  Oppor- 
tunity contest  for  1926. 


NORTHBOUN' 

O'  de  wurl'  ain't  flat, 
An'  de  wurl'  ain't  roun', 
H'it's  one  long  strip 
Hangin'  up  an'  down — 
Jes'  Souf  an'  Norf ; 
Jes'  Norf  an'  Souf. 


202  LUCY    ARIEL    WILLIAMS 

Talkin'  'bout  sailin'  'round  dc  wurl' — 
Huh!     I'd  be  so  dizzy  my  head  'ud  twurl. 
If  dis  heah  earf  wuz  jes'  a  ball 
You  no  the  people  all  'ud  fall. 

O'  de  wurl'  ain't  flat, 
An'  de  wurl'  ain't  roun', 
H'it's  one  long  strip 
Hangin'  up  an'  down — 
Jes'  Souf  an'  Norf ; 
Jes'  Norf  an'  Souf. 

Talkin'  'bout  the  City  whut  Saint  John  saw 
Chile  you  oughta  go  to  Saginaw ; 
A  nigger's  chance  is  "finest  kind," 
An'  pretty  gals  ain't  hard  to  find. 

Huh !  de  wurl'  ain't  flat, 
An'  de  wurl'  ain't  roun% 
Jes'  one  long  strip 
Hangin'  up  an'  down. 
Since  Norf  is  up, 
An'  Souf  is  down, 
An'  Hebben  is  up, 
I'm  upward  boun'. 


GEORGE    LEONARD    ALLEN  203 

GEORGE     LEONARD     ALLEN 

I  was  born  in  Lumberton,  North  Carolina,  September 
10,  1905.  My  parents,  Professor  and  Mrs.  D.  P.  Allen, 
were  then  in  charge  of  Whitin  Normal  School,  a  thriving 
secondary  school  which  was  discontinued  at  my  father's 
death  some  ten  years  ago. 

My  high  school  days  were  spent  at  Redstone  Academy, 
located  at  Lumberton.  I  can  think  of  nothing  of  interest 
to  mention  concerning  this  period,  except  that  I  was  an 
omnivorous  reader,  and  learned  to  love  literature,  and 
especially  poetry,  with  a  passionate  intensity. 

Four  years  of  college  at  Johnson  C.  Smith  University 
followed,  during  which  time  I  studied  a  little,  read  a  great 
deal,  and  dabbled  in  music  and  literature.  Among  other 
things,  I  experimented  with  the  piano  enough  to  become 
a  fairly  advanced  performer. 

It  was  during  my  stay  at  college  that  my  longing  to 
become  a  writer  grew  particularly  ardent.  A  good  many 
of  my  literary  attempts  saw  the  light  in  school  and  local 
periodicals,  some  bringing  encouraging  comment.  In  June 
of  1926,  I  was  graduated,  having  been  chosen  as  valedic- 
torian for  that  year. 

I  feel  it  necessary  to  mention  here  that  my  college 
career  was  made  possible  mainly  through  the  sacrifices  of 
my  noble  and  devoted  mother. 

In  the  past  winter  I  was  engaged  in  teaching  at  Kendall 
Institute  in  Sumter,  S.  C.  During  this  time  some  of  my 
work  appeared  in  Opportunity,  American  Life,  The  South- 
western Christian  Advocate,  and  The  Lyric  West. 

This  year  one  of  my  poems,  "To  Melody,"  was  awarded 
the  prize  for  the  best  sonnet  in  a  state-wide  contest  con- 
ducted by  the  United  Daughters  of  the  Confederacy 
(North  Carolina  Division). 


204       GEORGE  LEONARD  ALLEN 

TO    MELODY 

I  think  that  man  hath  made  no  beauteous  thing 

More  lovely  than  a  glorious  melody 

That  soars  aloft  in  splendor,  full  and  free, 

And  graceful  as  a  swallow  on  the  wing ! 

A  melody  that  seems  to  move,  and  sing, 

And  quiver,  in  its  radiant,  ecstasy, 

That  bends  and  rises  like  a  slender  tree 

Which  sways  before  the  gentle  winds  of  Spring ! 

Ah,  men  will  ever  love  thee,  holy  art ! 
For  thou,  of  all  the  blessings  God  hath  given, 
Canst  best  revive  and  cheer  the  wounded  heart 
And  nearest  bring  the  weary  soul  to  Heaven ! 
Of  all  God's  precious  gifts,  it  seems  to  me, 
The  choicest  is  the  gift  of  melody. 

PORTRAIT 

Her  eyes?    Dark  pools  of  deepest  shade, 

Like  sylvan  lakes  that  lie 
In  some  sequestered  forest  glade 

Beneath  a  starry  sky. 

Her  cheeks?    The  ripened  chestnut's  hue, — 
Rich  autumn's  sun-kissed  brown ! 

Caressed  by  sunbeams  dancing  through 
Red  leaves  that  flutter  down. 


GEORGE  LEONARD  ALLEN       205 

Her  form?    A  slender  pine  that  sways 

Before  the  murmuring  breeze 
In  summer,  when  the  south  wind  plays 

Soft  music  through  the  trees. 

Herself?     A  laughing,  joyous  sprite 

Who  smiles  from  dawn  till  dark, 
As  lovely  as  a  summer  night 

And  carefree  as  a  lark. 


RICHARD     BRUCE 

I  was  born  in  Washington,  D.  C,  on  the  second  of  July, 
1906,  and  have  never  ceased  to  marvel  at  the  fact.  After 
attending  public  school  with  very  good  marks  (I  was 
thrashed  if  I  did  not  lead  my  class),  I  attended  Dunbar 
High  School  of  the  same  city.  When  I  was  thirteen  my 
father  died,  my  greatest  impression  being  the  crowded 
church  and  the  vault.  Mother  left  Washington  for  New 
York  where  my  brother  and  I  joined  her  in  a  few  months. 
New  York  was  an  adventure  and  still  is.  A  glorious 
something  torn  from  a  novel.  Even  the  first  hard  winter 
with  mother  ill  and  my  feet  on  the  ground  was  just  a  part 
of  it.  My  gathering  bits  of  fur  to  paste  on  newspaper  to 
cut  out  for  inner  soles  for  my  shoes,  the  walking  to  work 
to  save  carfare,  and  getting  lunch  as  best  I  could,  all 
seemed  romantic  and  highly  colored.  Weren't  there  the- 
atres and  lights,  Broadway,  Fifth  Avenue  .  .  .  and  lights? 
Noise  and  bustle  and  high  silk  hats  and  flowers  in  pots 
in  the  Bowery.  Hobble  cars  creeping  like  caterpillars  up 
Broadway.  Taxis  and  people  and  forty-second  street. 
Traffic  towers  and  tall  buildings.  Wasn't  this  New  York? 
A  year  later  I  discovered  Harlem.     I  was  at  that  time 


200  RICHARD    BRUCE 

an  art  apprentice  at  seven  fifty  a  week.  But  that  was  too 
little  money.  So  I  became  in  turn  errand  boy  for  ten 
dollars,  bell  hop  in  an  all-womens'  hotel  for  eleven  fifty- 
five,  eighteen  with  tips,  secretary  and  confidence  man  for 
a  modiste  for  twenty-five,  ornamental  iron-worker  and 
designer  for  twenty-eight,  and  elevator  operator  for  thirty. 
Then  I  had  the  mumps  and  despite  the  glamor  of  New 
York,  I  wanted  to  go,  just  go  somewhere.  So  I  went  to 
Panama  working  my  way.  Then  New  York  again  and  a 
costume  design  class.  A  visit  home  to  D.  C.  where  I  met 
Langston  Hughes.  Opportunity  accepted  my  first  poem. 
Washington  for  eleven  months  then  New  York  again.  I 
arrived  penniless  and  have  remained  so.  Dilatory  jobs, 
trips  to  New  England,  Florida,  California  and  Canada,  but 
always  New  York  again.  The  few  drawings  and  sketches 
made  on  these  trips  were  either  destroyed,  lost,  or  given 
away  en  route.  I  began  to  write  seriously  and  to  paint 
just  as  seriously;  I  entered  contests  but  never  won.  I  am 
still  penniless  and  happy  and  planning  to  go  to  Paris  and 
Vienna  by  hook  or  crook. 


SHADOW 

Silhouette 

On  the  face  of  the  moon 

Ami. 

A  dark  shadow  in  the  light. 

A  silhouette  am  I 

On  the  face  of  the  moon 

Lacking   color 

Or  vivid  brightness 

But  defined  all  the  clearer 


RICHARD    BRUCE  207 

Because 

I  am  dark, 

Black  on  the  face  of  the  moon. 

A  shadow  am  I 

Growing  in  the  light, 

Not  understood  as  is  the  day, 

But  more  easily  seen 

Because 

I  am  a  shadow  in  the  light. 


CAVALIER 

Slay  fowl  and  beast;  pluck  clean  the  vine, 
Prepare  the  feast  and  pearl  the  wine. 
Bring  on  the  best!     Bring  on  the  bard, 
Bring  on  the  rest.    Let  nought  retard 
Nor  yet  distress  with  putrid  breath, 
My  new  mistress,  My  Lady  Death. 


WARING     CUNEY 

Waring  Cuney  was  born  in  Washington,  D.  C,  May  6, 
1906.  He  received  his  education  in  the  public  schools  of 
that  city  and  at  Howard  University.  Later  he  attended 
Lincoln  University,  and  while  there  sang  in  the  Glee  Club 
and  the  quartet.  His  work  with  these  groups  encouraged 
him  to  study  music  and  he  is  now  studying  voice  at  the 
New  England  Conservatory  of  Music  in  Boston.  His 
first  published  poem  was  "No  Images"  which  won  first 
award  in  the  Opportunity  contest  of  1926.     Since  then  he 


208  WARING    CUNEY 

has  continued  to  write  and  his  poems  have  appeared  in 
Opportunity,  Braithwaite's  Anthology,  The  Forum,  and 
Palms. 


THE    DEATH    BED 

All  the  time  they  were  praying 
He  watched  the  shadow  of  a  tree 
Flicker  on  the  wall. 

There  is  no  need  of  prayer, 

He  said, 

No  need  at  all. 

The  kin-folk  thought  it  strange 

That  he  should  ask  them  from  a  dying  bed. 

But  they  left  all  in  a  row 

And  it  seemed  to  ease  him 

To    see   them   go. 

There  were  some  who  kept  on  praying 

In  a  room  across  the  hall 

And  some  who  listened  to  the  breeze 

That  made  the  shadows  waver 

On  the  wall. 

He  tried  his  nerve 
On  a  song  he  knew 
And  made  an  empty  note 


WARING    CUNEY  209 


That  might  have  come, 
From  a  bird's  harsh  throat. 

And  all  the  time  it  worried  him 
That  they  were  in  there  praying 
And  all  the  time  he  wondered 
What  it  was  they  could  be  saying. 


A    TRIVIALITY 

Not  to  dance  with  her 
Was  such  a  trivial  thing 

There  were  girls  more  fair  than  she, — - 

To-day 

Ten  girls  dressed  in  white. 

Each  had  a  white  rose  wreath. 

They  made  a  dead  man's  arch 
And  ten  strong  men 
Carried  a  body  through. 

Not  to  dance  with  her 
Was  a  trivial  thing. 


210  WARING     CUNEY 

I    THINK    I    SEE    HIM    THERE 

I  think  I  see  Him  there 
With  a  stern  dream  on  his  face 

I  see  Him  there — 

Wishing  they  would  hurry 
The  last  nail  in  place. 

And  I  wonder,  had  I  been  there, 
Would  I  have  doubted  too 

Or  would  the  dream  have  told  me, 
What  this  man  speaks  is  true. 

DUST 

Dust, 

Through  which 
Proud  blood 
Once  flowed. 

Dust, 

Where  a  civilization 
Flourished. 


WARING    CUNEY  211 

Dust, 

The  Valley  of  the  Nile, 

Dust, 

You  proud  ones,  proud  of  the  skill 

With  which  you  play  this  game — Civilization ; 

Do  not  forget  that  it  is  a  very  old  game. 

Men  used  to  play  it  on  the  banks 

Of  the  Tigris  and  the  Euphrates 

When  the  world  was  a  wilderness. 

There  is  a  circle  around  China 
Where  once  a  wall  stood. 
Carthage  is  a  heap  of  ashes. 
And  Rome  knew  the  pomp  and  glory 
You  know  now. 

The  Coliseum  tells  a  story 

The  Woolworth  Building  may  repeat. 

Dust, 

Pharaohs  and  their  armies  sleep  there. 

Dust, 

Shall  it  stir  again? 

Will  Pharaohs  rise  and  rule 

And  their  armies  march  once  more? 

Civilization  continually  shifts 
Upon  the  places  of  the  earth. 


£12  WARING     CUNEY 

NO    IMAGES 

She  does  not  know 
Her  beauty, 

She  thinks  her  brown  body 
Has  no  glory. 

If  she  could  dance 

Naked, 

Under  palm  trees 

And  see  her  image  in  the  river 

She  would  know. 

But  there  are  no  palm  trees 

On  the  street, 

And  dish  water  gives  back  no  images, 

THE    RADICAL 

Men   never  know 

What  they  are  doing. 

They  always  make  a  muddle 

Of  their  affairs, 

They   always   tie  their   affairs 

Into  a  knot 

They  cannot  untie. 

Then  I  come  in 

Uninvited. 


WARING    CUNEY  213 

They  do  not  ask  me  in; 
I  am  the  radical, 
The  bomb  thrower, 
I  untie  the  knot 
That  they  have  made, 
And  they  never  thank  me. 


TRUE    LOVE 

Her  love  is  true  I  know, 
Much  more  true 
Than  angel's  love; 
For  angels  love  in  heaven 
Where  a  thousand  harps 
Are  playing. 

She  loves  in  a  tenement 

Where  the  only  music 

She  hears 

Is  the  cry  of  street  car  brakes 

And  the  toot  of  automobile  horns 

And  the  drip  of  a  kitchen  spigot 

All  day. 

Her  love  is  true  I  know. 


EDWARD     S.     SILVERA 

I   was   born   in   Florida   in   the   year    1906 — moved   to 
Orange,  N.  J.,  at  an  early  age — graduated  from  Orange 


214  EDWARD    S.     SILVERA 

High  School  in  1924 — am  now  a  Junior  at  Lincoln  Uni- 
\crsity,  Pennsylvania.  Here  I  am  a  member  of  the  varsity 
basket-ball  and  tennis  teams  and  a  member  of  Kappa 
Alpha  Psi  Fraternity. 

I  get  a  great  deal  of  pleasure  out  of  observing  life  and 
then  writing  about  it  just  as  I  see  it. 


SOUTH    STREET 

(Philadelphia,  Pa.) 

South  Street  is  not  beautiful, 
But  the  songs  of  people  there 
Hold  the  beauty  of  the  jungle, 
And  the  fervidness  of  prayer. 

South  Street  has  no  mansions, 
But  the  hands  of  South  Street  men 
Built  pyramids  along  the  Nile 
That  Time  has  failed  to  rend. 

South  Street  is  America, 
Breast  of  the  foster  mother 
Where  a  thousand  ill-kept  children 
Vie  for  suck,  with  one  another. 


JUNGLE    TASTE 

There  is  a  coarseness 
In  the  songs  of  black  men 


EDWARD    S.    SILVERA  215 

Coarse  as  the  songs 

Of  the  sea, 

There  is   a  weird   strangeness 

In  the  songs   of  black  men 

Which  sounds  not  strange 

To  me. 

There  is  beauty 

In  the  faces  of  black  women, 

Jungle  beauty 

And  mystery 

Dark  hidden  beauty 

In  the  faces  of  black  women, 

Which  only  black  men 

See. 


HELENE    JOHNSON 

Helene  Johnson  was  born  twenty  years  ago  in  Boston, 
Mass.,  where  she  received  her  early  education  and  attended 
Boston  University  for  a  short  time.  A  year  ago  she  came 
to  New  York  to  attend  the  Extension  Division  of  Columbia 
University.  Her  work  has  appeared  in  Opportunity, 
Vanity  Fair  and  several  New  York  dailies;  and  has  been 
reprinted  in  Palms,  The  Literary  Digest,  and  Braithwaite's 
Anthology. 


210  HELENE    JOHNSON 

WHAT    DO   I    CARE    FOR   MORNING 

What  do  I  care  for  morning, 

For  a  shivering  aspen  tree, 

For  sun  flowers  and  sumac 

Opening  greedily? 

What  do  I  care  for  morning, 

For  the  glare  of  the  rising  sun, 

For  a  sparrow's  noisy  prating, 

For  another  day  begun? 

Give  me  the  beauty  of  evening, 

The  cool  consummation  of  night, 

And  the  moon  like  a  love-sick  lady, 

Listless  and  wan  and  white. 

Give  me  a  little  valley 

Huddled  beside  a  hill, 

Like  a  monk  in  a  monastery, 

Safe  and  contented  and  still, 

Give  me  the  white  road  glistening, 

A  strand  of  the  pale  moon's  hair, 

And  the  tall  hemlocks  towering 

Dark  as  the  moon  is  fair. 

Oh  what  do  I  care  for  morning, 

Naked  and  newly  born — 

Night  is  here,  yielding  and  tender — 

What  do  I  care  for  dawn! 


HELENE  JOHNSON  217 

SONNET  TO  A  NEGRO  IN  HARLEM 

You  are  disdainful  and  magnificent — 

Your  perfect  body  and  your  pompous  gait, 

Your  dark  eyes  flashing  solemnly  with  hate, 

Small  wonder  that  you  are  incompetent 

To  imitate  those  whom  you  so  despise — 

Your  shoulders  towering  high  above  the  throng, 

Your  head  thrown  back  in  rich,  barbaric  song, 

Palm  trees  and  mangoes  stretched  before  your  eyes* 

Let  others  toil  and  sweat  for  labor's  sake 

And  wring  from  grasping  hands  their  meed  of  gold. 

Why  urge  ahead  your  supercilious  feet? 

Scorn  will  efface  each  footprint  that  you  make. 

I  love  your  laughter  arrogant  and  bold. 

You  are  too  splendid  for  this  city  street ! 

SUMMER    MATURES 

Summer  matures.    Brilliant  Scorpion 

Appears.     The  Pelican's  thick  pouch 

Hangs  heavily  with  perch  and  slugs. 

The  brilliant-bellied  newt  flashes 

Its  crimson  crest  in  the  white  water. 

In  the  lush  meadow,  by  the  river, 

The  yellow-freckled  toad  laughs 

With  a  toothless  gurgle  at  the  white-necked  stork 

Standing  asleep  on  one  red  reedy  leg. 


218  IIELENE    JOHNSON 

And  here  Pan  dreams  of  slim  stalks  clean  for  piping, 

And  of  a  nightingale  gone  mad  with  freedom. 

Come.    I  shall  weave  a  bed  of  reeds 

And  willow  limbs  and  pale  nightflowers. 

I  shall  strip  the  roses  of  their  petals, 

And  the  white  down  from  the  swan's  neck. 

Come.     Night  is  here.     The  air  is  drunk 

With  wild  grape  and  sweet  clover. 

And  by  the  sacred  fount  of  Aganippe 

Euterpe  sings  of  love.     Ah,  the  woodland  creatures, 

The  doves  in  pairs,  the  wild  sow  and  her  shoats, 

The  stag  searching  the  forest  for  a  mate, 

Know  more  of  love  than  you,  my  callous  Phaon. 

The  young  moon  is  a  curved  white  scimitar 

Pierced  thru  the  swooning  night. 

Sweet  Phaon.     With  Sappho  sleep  like  the  stars   at 

dawn. 
This  night  was  born  for  love,  my  Phaon. 
Come. 


POEM 

Little  brown  boy, 

Slim,  dark,  big-eyed, 

Crooning  love  songs  to  your  banjo 

Down  at  the  Lafayette — 

Gee,  boy,  I  love  the  way  you  hold  your  head, 

High  sort  of  and  a  bit  to  one  side, 

Like  a  prince,  a  jazz  prince.    And  I  love 


HELENE    JOHNSON  219 

Your  eyes  flashing,  and  your  hands, 

And  your  patent-leathered  feet, 

And  your  shoulders  jerking  the  jig-wa. 

And  I  love  your  teeth  flashing, 

And  the  way  your  hair  shines  in  the  spotlight 

Like  it  was  the  real  stuff. 

Gee,  brown  boy,  I  loves  you  all  over. 

I'm  glad  I'm  a  jig.    I'm  glad  I  can 

Understand  your  dancin'  and  your 

Singing  and  feel  all  the  happiness 

And  joy  and  don't  care  in  you. 

Gee,  boy,  when  you  sing,  I  can  close  my  ears 

And  hear  torn  toms  just  as  plain. 

Listen  to  me,  will  you,  what  do  I  know 

About  torn  toms?     But  I  like  the  word,  sort  of, 

Don't  you?    It  belongs  to  us. 

Gee,  boy,  I  love  the  way  you  hold  your  head, 

And  the  way  you  sing,  and  dance, 

And  everything. 

Say,  I  think  you're  wonderful.     You're 

Allright  with  me, 

You  are. 


FULFILLMENT 

To  climb  a  hill  that  hungers  for  the  sky, 

To  dig  my  hands  wrist  deep  in  pregnant  earth, 

To  watch  a  young  bird,  veering,  learn  to  fly, 
To  give  a  still,  stark  poem  shining  birth. 


220  HELENEJOHNSON 

To  hear  the  rain  drool,  dimpling,  down  the  drain 
And  splash  with  a  wet  giggle  in  the  street, 

To  ramble  in  the  twilight  after  supper, 

And  to  count  the  pretty  faces  that  you  meet. 

To  ride  to  town  on  trolleys,  crowded,  teeming 

With   joy   and   hurry   and   laughter   and   push   and 
sweat — 

Squeezed  next  a  patent-leathered  Negro  dreaming 
Of  a  wrinkled  river  and  a  minnow  net. 

To  buy  a  paper  from  a  breathless  boy, 

And  read  of  kings  and  queens  in  foreign  lands, 

Hyperbole  of  romance  and  adventure, 
All  for  a  penny  the  color  of  my  hand. 

To  lean  against  a  strong  tree's  bosom,  sentient 

And    hushed   before   the    silent    prayer   it   breathes, 

To  melt  the  still  snow  with  my  seething  body 
And  kiss  the  warm  earth  tremulous  underneath. 

Ah,  life,  to  let  your  stabbing  beauty  pierce  me 
And  wound  me  like  we  did  the  studded  Christ, 

To  grapple  with  you,  loving  you  too  fiercely, 
And  to  die  bleeding — consummate  with  Life. 


HELENE    JOHNSON  221 

THE    ROAD 

Ah,  uttle  road  all  whirry  in  the  breeze, 

A  leaping  clay  hill  lost  among  the  trees, 

The  bleeding  note  of  rapture  streaming  thrush 

Caught  in  a  drowsy  hush 

And  stretched  out  in  a  single  singing  line  of  dusky 

song. 
Ah  little  road,  brown  as  my  race  is  brown, 
Your  trodden  beauty  like  our  trodden  pride, 
Dust  of  the  dust,  they  must  not  bruise  you  down. 
Rise  to  one  brimming  golden,  spilling  cry ! 


BOTTLED 

Upstairs  on  the  third  floor 

Of  the  135th  Street  library 

In  Harlem,  I  saw  a  little 

Bottle  of  sand,  brown  sand 

Just  like  the  kids  make  pies 

Out  of  down  at  the  beach. 

But  the  label  said:  "This 

Sand  was  taken  from  the  Sahara  desert." 

Imagine  that !     The  Sahara  desert ! 

Some  bozo's  been  all  the  way  to  Africa  to  get  some  sand. 

And  yesterday  on  Seventh  Avenue 
I  saw  a  darky  dressed  fit  to  kill 


m  I1ELENE    JOHNSON 

In  yellow  gloves  and  swallow  tail  coat 

And  swirling  a  cane.     And  everyone 

Was  laughing  at  him.     Me  too, 

At  first,  till  I  saw  his  face 

When  he  stopped  to  hear  a 

Organ  grinder  grind  out  some  jazz. 

Boy  !    You  should  a  seen  that  darky's  face ! 

It  just  shone.     Gee,  he  was  happy! 

And  he  began  to  dance.     No 

Charleston  or  Black  Bottom  for  him. 

No  sir.     He  danced  just  as  dignified 

And  slow.     No,  not  slow  either. 

Dignified  and  proud!     You  couldn't 

Call  it  slow,  not  wTith  all  the 

Cuttin'  up  he  did.     You  would  a  died  to  see  him. 

The  crowd  kept  yellin*  but  he  didn't  hear, 

Just  kept  on  dancin'  and  twirlin'  that  cane 

And  yellin'  out  loud  every  once  in  a  while. 

I  know  the  crowd  thought  he  was  coo-coo. 

But  say,  I  was  where  I  could  see  his  face, 

And  somehow,  I  could  see  him  dancin'  in  a  jungle, 

A  real  honest-to-cripe  jungle,  and  he  wouldn't  have  on 

them 
Trick  clothes — those  yaller  shoes  and  yaller  gloves 
And  swallow-tail  coat.     He  wouldn't  have  on  nothing. 
And  he  wouldn't  be  carrying  no  cane. 
He'd  be  carrying  a  spear  with  a  sharp  fine  point 
Like  the  bayonets  we  had  "over  there." 
And  the  end  of  it  would  be  dipped  in  some  kind  of 


HELENB    JOHNSON  223 

Hoo-doo  poison.    And  he'd  be  dancin'  black  and  naked 

and  gleaming. 
And  he'd  have  rings  in  his  ears  and  on  his  nose 
And  bracelets  and  necklaces  of  elephants'  teeth. 
Gee,  I  bet  he'd  be  beautiful  then  all  right. 
No  one  would  laugh  at  him  then,  I  bet. 
Say !    That  man  that  took  that  sand  from  the  Sahara 

desert 
And  put  it  in  a  little  bottle  on  a  shelf  in  the  library, 
That's  what  they  done  to  this  shine,  ain't  it?    Bottled 

him. 
Trick  shoes,  trick  coat,  trick  cane,  trick  everything — 

all  glass — 
But  inside — 
Gee,  that  poor  shine ! 


MAGALU 

Summer  comes. 

The  ziczac  hovers 

'Round  the  greedy-mouthed  crocodile. 

A  vulture  bears  away  a  foolish  jackal. 

The  flamingo  is  a  dash  of  pink 

Against  dark  green  mangroves, 

Her  slender  legs  rivalling  her  slim  neck. 

The  laughing  lake  gurgles  delicious  music  in  its  throat 

And  lulls  to  sleep  the  lazy  lizard, 

A  nebulous  being  on  a  sun-scorched  rock. 


2*4  HELENE    JOHNSON 

In  such  a  place, 

In  this  pulsing,  riotous  gasp  of  color, 

I  met  Magalu,  dark  as  a  tree  at  night, 

Eager-lipped,  listening  to  a  man  with  a  white  collar 

And  a  small  black  book  with  a  cross  on  it. 

Oh  Magalu,  come !    Take  my  hand  and  I  will  read  you 

poetry, 
Chromatic  words, 
Seraphic   symphonies, 
Fill   up  your   throat  with   laughter   and   your   heart 

with  song. 
Do  not  let  him  lure  you  from  your  laughing  waters, 
Lulling  lakes,  lissome  winds. 
Would   you   sell   the   colors    of   your   sunset    and   the 

fragrance 
Of  your  flowers,  and  the  passionate  wonder  of  your 

forest 
For  a  creed  that  will  not  let  you  dance? 


WESLEY     CURTWRIGHT 

Wesley  Curtwright  was  born  in  Brunswick,  Georgia,  on 
November  30,  1910,  but  he  knows  as  little  about  Georgia, 
perhaps,  as  about  any  state  in  the  South.  Immediately 
after  his  father's  death  in  1913,  he  began  a  disjointed 
tour  of  the  land.  He  has  "broken  out  in  spots"  of  a  dozen 
states  both  South  and  North,  attending  at  intervals  var- 
ious schools.  He  lives  in  New  York  at  present  and  has 
lived  there  three  years.  He  is  attending  Harlem  Academy, 
a  small  private  school.  He  has  contributed  to  Opportunity 
and  The  Messenger. 


WESLEY    CURTWRIGHT  225 

THE    CLOSE    OF    DAY 

"To  meet  and  then  to  part,"  and  that  is  all, 
To  slowly  turn  an  album's  crusty  leaves, 
To  see  the  faces  and  the  scenes  recall, 
Are  things  that  in  a  lifetime  one  achieves. 

To  wander  down  a  broad-arch  gallery, 
Viewing  the  scenes  from  life  on  either  side, 
Pressed  forward  with  the  force  of  years  to  see 
But  part  of  every  picture  when  espied. 

The  big  sun  in  its  blue  dome  keeps  its  course, 

Without  a  falter  moves  upon  its  way. 

So  human  life,  returning  to  its  source, 

Is  overtaken  by  the  close  of  day. 

To  dream,  and  being  rudely  waked  from  thought, 

Return  to  peaceful  dreaming  dearly  bought. 

LULA     LOWE     WEEDEN 

Lula  Lowe  Weeden  was  born  in  Lynchburg,  Va.,  Feb. 
4,  1918.  Her  mother,  Mrs.  Lula  L.  Weeden,  herself  a 
poet  of  ability,  writes  of  this  youngest  of  Negro  singers : 
"She  is  a  very  close  observer.  Each  flower  in  my  garden 
she  knows.  Sometimes  she  counts  each  bloom,  lingering 
over  those  she  likes  most. 

"Each  one  of  my  children  is  very  distinct  in  her  make 
up.  Lula  is  quiet,  sweet  and  unselfish,  a  decided  contrast 
to  the  second.     This  gives  each  a  chance  for  moral  develop- 


LULA    LOWE    WEEDEN 

ment  while  trying  to  adjust  her  little  mind  to  the  other.  A 
few  nights  ago,  Iola  the  second  child  slapped  Mary  the 
baby.  Lula  said  to  Iola,  'You  are  not  being  a  good  citizen 
when  you  strike  back  even  if  Mary  did  slap  you/  An- 
other time,  Iola  was  saying  what  her  teacher  had  said 
about  her.  Lula  remarked,  'It  is  not  what  she  says  you 
do,  it  is  what  you  do  do/  Neither  statement  meant  much 
to  Iola. 

"I  have  always  mixed  my  night  time  stories  with  '  Home 
spun  ones.'  All  seem  to  like  them  best.  I  asked  Lula 
since  Christmas  why  she  liked  my  stories.  She  said  be- 
cause they  seemed  to  be  true,  and  criticized  fairy  stories. 

"I  have  emphasized  racial  stories  for  this  reason — I 
was  born  on  a  big  farm.  There  were  many  employed  by 
my  father,  also  tenants.  With  these  we  were  not  allowed 
to  mingle.  On  the  edge  of  the  farm  there  was  a  white 
school.  There  was  a  barrier  also.  Those  little  girls  with 
golden  locks  looked  like  little  angels  to  me.  How  I 
wished  to  be  like  them  with  their  shrill  voices  and  laughter. 
They  seemed  so  happy.  I  just  thought  of  them  as  things 
apart.  It  took  much  to  get  this  false  conception  out  of 
me.  They  were  just  God  sent.  This  I  have  tried  not  to 
have  my  children  to  fight.  Now  neither  one  wishes  to  be 
white  or  dislikes  them.  To  them,  they  all  seem  like 
people. 

"Lula  does  most  of  her  writing  at  night.  It  is  a  priv- 
ilege to  remain  a  few  minutes  after  the  other  children  to 
finish  something.  Some  nights  she  will  write  several.  She 
mumbles  them  to  herself  before  she  begins  to  write  and 
then  keeps  saying  the  words  softly.  She  will  finish  this 
and  will  draw  figures  and  flowers  or  people.  This  she 
does  very  well  for  a  child  until  she  says,  'I  am  going  to 
write  something  else/  Interruptions  don't  seem  to  bother 
her  very  much  as  the  little  ones  are  always  saying  some- 
thing to  make  her  laugh.     I  usually  attempt  to  quiet  them, 


LULALOWEWEEDEN  227 

but  some  of  her  best  things  are  written  with  many  around. 

"When  she  shows  them  to  me,  she  watches  for  a  favor- 
able expression.  I  always  try  to  be  pleased,  but  some- 
how she  knows  from  my  face  that  that  was  not  so  good, 
then  remarks,  'I  am  going  to  write  something  else/ 

"The  amusing  part  about  it  all  is  that  she  feels  as  she 
has  begun  to  write  at  a  mature  age,  but  consoles  herself 
with  this  statement,  'Stevenson  did  not  begin  to  write  until 
he  was  fifteen  and  wrote  very  skillful  things.' 

"Lula  is  just  a  little  girl  and  is  very  talkative  if  any- 
one appeals  to  her  and  will  talk  with  her.  You  can't 
explain  anything  too  minutely  for  her — whether  it  is  her 
Sunday  school  lesson  or  a  star,  it  matters  little." 


ME   ALONE 

As  I  was  going  to  town, 

I  saw  a  King  and  a  Queen. 

Such  ringing  of  bells  you  never  heard, 

The  clerks  ran  out  of  the  stores; 

You  know  how  it  was,  Me  alone. 

I  was  standing  as  the  others  were, 

"Oh!  you  little  girl,"  some  one  said, 

"The  King  wants  you," 

I  became  frightened 

Wondering  what  he  had  to  say, 

Me  alone. 

Here's  what  he  wanted : 

He  wanted  me  to  ride  in  his  coach, 

I  felt  myself  so  much  riding  in  a  King's  coach, 

Me  alone. 


228  LULA    LOWE    WEEDEN 

HAVE   YOU    SEEN    IT 

Have  you  ever  seen  the  moon 
And  stars  stick  together? 
Have  you  ever  seen  it? 
Have  you  ever  seen  bad? 
Have  you  ever  seen  good 
And  bad  stick  together? 
Have  you  ever  seen  it? 

ROBIN    RED    BREAST 

Little  Robin  red  breast, 

I  hear  you  sing  your  song. 

I  would  love  to  have  you  put  it  into  ray  little  cage, 

Into  my  little  mouth. 

THE    STREAM 

It  was  running  down  to  the  great  Atlantic. 

I  called  it  back  to  me, 

But  it  slyly  looked  and  said, 

"I  have  not  time  to  waste," 

And  just  went  arunning  running  on. 


LULA    LOWE    WEEDEN 

THE    LITTLE   DANDELION 

The  dandelion  stares 
In  the  yellow  sunlight. 
How  very  still  it  is! 
When  it  is  old  and  grey, 
I  blow  its  white  hair  away, 
And  leave  it  with  a  bald  head. 

DANCE 

Down  at  the  hall  at  midnight  sometimes, 
You  hear  them  singing  rhymes. 
These  girls  are  dancing  with  boys. 
They  are  too  big  for  toys. 


INDEX 


Absence,  91 

Across  the  dewy  lawn  she  treads, 
195 

A  crust  of  bread  and  a  corner 
to  sleep  in,  5 

Advice,  156 

A  fancy  halts  my  feet  at  the  way- 
side well,  15 

Africa,  123 

After  All,  191 

After  the  Quarrel,  5 

Ah,  how  poets  sing  and  die,  50 

Ah,  I  know  what  happiness  is, 
107 

Ah,  little  road  whirry  in  the 
breeze,  221 

Ah,  you  are  cruel,  47 

Alexander,  Lewis,  122 

Allen,  George  Leonard,  203 

All  that  night  I  walked  alone 
and  wept,  169 

All  the  time  they  were  praying, 
208 

Although  she  feeds  me  bread  of 
bitterness,  83 

Always  at  dusk,  the  same  tear- 
less experience,  37 

America,  83 

And  God  stepped  out  on  space, 
19 

And  What  Shall  You  Say?  103 

April  Day,  An,  102 

A  silence  slipping  around  like 
death,  46 

As  I  was  going  to  town,  227 

A  tree  is  more  than  a  shadow, 
170 

At  the  Carnival,  53 

Auf  Wiedersehen,  189 

Baby  Cobina,  200 
Baker's  Boy,  The,  58 


Band  of  Gideon,  The,  103 

Beat  the  drums  of  tragedy  for 

me,  148 
Bennett,  Gwendolyn  B.,  153 
Black  Madonna,  The,  177 
Black  Man  Talks  of  Reaping,  At 

165 
Black  reapers  with  the  sound  of 

steel  on  stone,  94 
Blight,  170 
Boll-weevil's    coming,    and    the 

winter's  cold,  99 
Bontemps,  Arna,  162 
Bottled,  221 
Bow  down  my  soul  in  worship 

very  low,  87 
Braithwaite,    William    Stan- 
ley, 31 
Brooks,  Jonathan  Henderson, 

192 
Brother,  come,  103 
Brother  to  the  firefly,  55 
Brown,  Sterling  A.,  129 
Brown  Baby  Cobina,  200 
Bruce,  Richard,  205 
Brushes    and    paints    are    all    I 

have,  155 

Cavalier,  207 

Cemeteries  are  places  for  de- 
parted souls,  159 

Challenge,  138 

Chilled  into  a  serenity,  110 

Close  of  Day,  The,  225 

Close  Your  Eyes,  171 

Come,  brother,  come.  Let's  lift 
it,  97 

Confession,  190 

Consider  me  a  memory,  a  dream 
that  passed  away,  79 

Cotter,  Joseph  S.,  Sr.,  10 

Cotter,  Joseph  S.,  Jr.,  99 


INDEX 


231 


Cotton  Song,  97 
Could  I  but  retrace,  125 
Creation,  The,  19 
Creed,  51 

CULLEN,   CoUNTEE,   179 

Cuney,  Waring,  207 

CuRTWRIGHT,   WESLEY,  224 

Dance,  229 

Dark  Brother,  The,  124 

Day  and  Night,  129 

Day-breakers,  The,  171 

Dear,  when  we  sit  in  that  high, 

placid  room,  66 
Death  Bed,  The,  208 
Death  Song,  4 
Debt,  The,  9 

Delany,  Clarissa  Scott,  140 
Del  Cascar,  33 
De  railroad  bridge's  a  sad  song, 

147 
Deserter,  The,  102 
Desolate,  88 
Dickinson,    Blanche   Taylor, 

105 
Down  at  the  hall  at  midnight 

sometimes,  229 
Dream  Variation,  149 
Dreams  of  the  Dreamer,  The,  80 
Du    Bois,     William    Edward 

burghardt,  25 
Dunbar,  Paul  Laurence,  1 
Dunbar,  50 
Dusk,  46 
Dust,  210 
Dust,     through     which     proud 

blood  once  flowed,  210 

Ere  Sleep  Comes  Down  to  Soothe 

the  Weary  Eyes,  2 
Evening  Song,  94 
Exhortation:  Summer,  1919,  84 
Eyes  of  My  Regret,  The,  37 

Face,  98 

Fantasy,  158 

Fantasy  in  Purple,  148 

Father  John's  bread  was  made 

of  rye,  31 
Fauset,  Jessie,  64 


Flame-flower,  Day-torch, 
Mauna  Loa,  52 

Flame-Heart,  85 

For  the  Candle  Light,  45 

For  this  peculiar  tint  that  paints 
my  house,  92 

Four  Epitaphs,  186 

Four  great  walls  have  hemmed 
me  in,  110 

Four  Walls,  110 

Fragment,  70 

Frail  children  of  sorrow,  de- 
throned by  a  hue,  75 

From  the  Dark  Toioer,  183 

From  the  German  of  Uhland,  17 

Fulfillment,  219 

Full  moon  rising  on  the  waters 
of  my  heart,  94 

Gay     little     Girl-of-the-Diving- 

Tank,  53 
Georgia  Dusk,  95 
Gethsemane,  169 
Give    over    to    high    things    the 

fervent  thought,  182 
Glory  of  the  Day  Was  in  Her  Face, 

The,  18 
God  Give  to  Men,  172 
God  give  the  yellow  man,  172 
Golgotha  Is  a  Mountain,  173 
Go  through  the  gates  with  closed 

eyes,  171 
Grass  Fingers,  38 
Greenness,  36 
Grimke,  Angelina  Weld,  35 

Hair — silver-gray,    like    streams 

of  stars,  98 
Hatred,  160 
Have  you  ever  seen  the  moon, 

228 
Have  You  Seen  It,  228 
Hayes,  Donald  Jeffrey,  188 
Hayford,  Gladys  May  Casely, 

196 
Heart  of  a  Woman,  The,  81 
He     came    in    silvern     armour, 

trimmed  with  black,  160 
Her  eyes?    Dark  pools  of  deepest 

shade,  204 


231 


INDEX 


Her  love  is  true  I  know,  213 
He   scans   the   world    wilh   calm 

and  fearless  eyes,  34 
He  wrote  upon  his  heart,  188 
His    friends    went    off    and    left 

Him  dead,  193 
Homesick  Blues,  147 
Homing,  172 
Hope,  75 

Horne,  Frank,  111 
House  in  Taos,  A,  152 
How    did    it    happen    that    we 

quarreled?  65 
Hughes,  Langston,  144 
Hushed  by  the  Hands  of  Sleep,  36 

I  am  so  tired  and  weary,  101 

I  ask  you  this,  146 

I  buried  you  deeper  last  night, 

113 
I  cannot  hold   my  peace,  John 

Keats,  184 
I  do  not  ask  for  love,  ah!  no,  77 
I  doubt  not  God  is  good,  182 
I  had  no  thought  of  violets  of 

late,  72 
/  Have  a  Friend,  47 
/  Have  a  Rendezvous  with  Life,  180 
I    have    gone    back    in    boyish 

wonderment,  139 
I  have  seen  a  lovely  thing,  170 
I  have  sown  beside  all  waters  in 

my  day,  165 
I  have  the  greatest  fun  at  night, 

58 
I  kissed  a  kiss  in  youth,  31 
I  know  not  why  or  whence  he 

came,  102 
I    know    what    the    caged    bird 

feels,  alas!  8 
I  laks  yo'  kin'  of  lovin',  134 
I  long  not  now,  181 
I  love  you  for  your  brownness, 

157 
I  love  your  hands,  44 
I  return  the  bitterness,  124 
I  said,  in  drunken  pride  of  youth 

and  you,  138 
I   sailed   in    my   dreams   to   the 

Land  of  Night,  158 


I  see  in  your  eyes,  178 

I  shall  come  this  way  again,  189 

I  shall  hate  you,  160 

I   shall   make  a  song  like   your 

hair,  155 
I  should  like  to  creep,  42 
/  Sit  and  Sew,  73 
I   that   had   found   the   way   so 

smooth,  70 
/  Think  I  See  Him  There,  210 
I  think  that  man  hath,  204 
I  thought  I  saw  an  angel  flying 

low,  166 
/  Too,  145 
/  Want  to  Die  While   You  Love 

Me,  78 
/  Weep,  45 

I  went  to  court  last  night,  63 
If   I    have   run    my   course   and 

seek  the  pearls,  64 
If    my    garden    oak    spares    one 

bare  ledge,  51 
I'm  folding  up  my  little  dreams, 

79 
Incident,  187 
Innocence,  51 
Inscription,  188 
Interim,  142 
In  wintertime  I  have  such  fun, 

59 
Is  Life  itself  but  many  ways  of 

thought,  48 
It  crawled  away  'neath  my  feet, 

109 
It  is  fitting  that  you  be  here,  112 
It  was  running  down  to  the  great 

Atlantic,  228 
I've  known  rivers,  149 

Japanese  Hokku,  127 
Jericho  is  on  the  inside,  106 
Johnson,  Fenton,  61 
Johnson,  Georgia  Douglas,  74 
Johnson,  Helene,  215 
Johnson,  James  Weldon,  15 
Joy,  140 
Joy  shakes  me  like  the  wind  that 

lifts  a  sail,  140 
Jungle  Taste,  214 


INDEX 


233 


Lady,  my  lady,  come  from  out 

the  garden,  136 
Lancelot,  169 
Last  Quarter  Moon  of  the  Dying 

Year,  The,  195 
La  Vie  Cest  La  Vie,  69 
Lay  me  down  beneaf  de  willers 

in  de  grass,  4 
Lemme  be  wid  Casey  Jones,  130 
Length  of  Moon,  168 
Lethe,  77 
Let  me  learn  now  where  Beauty 

is,  48 
Letters  Found  Near  a  Suicide,  114 
Life,  5 

Life-Long,  Poor  Browning,  49 
Lines  to  a  Nasturtium,  52 
Lines    Written    at    the    Grave    of 

Alexander  Dumas,  159 
Litany  of  Atlanta,  A,  26 
Little  black  boy,  120 
Little  brown  boy,  218 
Little  Dandelion,  The,  229 
Little  Robin  red  breast,  228 
Little  Son,  76 
"Lo,  I  am  black  but  I  am  comely 

too,"  124 
Lolotte,  who  attires  my  hair,  67 
Long  Gone,  134 
Long   have   I   beat   with    timid 

hands,  76 

Magalu,  223 

Marathon  Runner,  The,  64 

Mask,  The,  143 

Matheus,  John  Frederick,  60 

Maumee  Ruth,  133 

McCall,  James  Edward,  33 

McKay,  Claude,  81 

Me  Alone,  227 

Men  never  know,  212 

Might  as  well  bury  her,  133 

Mona  Lisa,  A,  42 

Morning  Light,  55 

Mother  to  Son,  151 

My  City,  25 

My  heart  that  was  so  passionless, 

70 
My  House,  92 
My  Little  Dreams,  79 


My  little  stone,  114 

My  spirit  is  a  pestilential  city, 

88 
My  window  opens  out  into  the 

trees,  141 

Nativity,  197 

Negro  Speaks  of  Rivers,  The,  149 

Negro  Woman,  122 

Neighbors,  47 

Nelson,  Alice  Dunbar,  71 

New  Negro,  The,  34 

Newsome,  Mary  Effie  Lee,  55 

Nigger,  120 

Night,  189 

Night  like  purple  flakes  of  snow, 

189 
Noblesse  Oblige,  67 
Nocturne,  190 
Nocturne  at  Bethesda,  166 
No  Images,  212 
Northboun,  201 
Not  as  the  white  nations,  177 
Not  to  dance  with  her,  209 
November  Cotton  Flower,  99 

O  apple  blossoms,  127 

O  brothers  mine,  take  care!  Take 

care!  22 
October  XXIX,  1795,  32 
O'  de  wurl'  ain't  flat,  201 
Odyssey  of  Big  Boy,  130 
Oh,  the  blue,  blue  bloom,  56 
Old  Black  Men,  77 
Once  more,  listening  to  the  wind 

and  rain,  163 
Once  riding  in  old  Baltimore,  187 
On  Seeing  Two  Brown  Boys  in  a 

Catholic  Church,  112 
On  such  a  day  as  this  I  think,  102 
On  summer  afternoons  I  sit,  69 
On  the  dusty  earth-drum,  100 
O  Silent  God,  Thou  whose  voice 

afar,  26 
Out  in  the  sky  the  great  clouds 

are  massing,  7 
Out  of  the  tense  awed  darkness, 

198 
O  you  would  clothe  me  in  silken 

frocks,  87 


23  i 


INDEX 


Paean,  195 
Pansy.  56 
Paradox,  43 

Poem,  107 

Poem,  150 

Poem,  218 

Portrait,  204 

Pour  O  pour  that  parting  soul 

in  song,  96 
Prai/cr,  146 
Protest,  181 
Proving,  77 

PucA;  Go<?s  to  Court,  63 
Puppet  Player,  The,  46 

Quatrains,  155 
Questing,  48 
Qiaft.  7/Ae,  58 
Quoits,  59 

Radical,  The,  212 

itazn  Music,  100 

Rainy  Season  Love  Song,  198 

Reapers,  94 

Recessional,  79 

Rencontre,  70 

Requiem,  61 

Resurrection,  The,  193 

Return,  139 

/taurn,  7/Ae,  70 

Return^  The,  163 

Revelation,  107 

Rice,  Albert,  176 

/toad,  77k  221 

/tofo'n  fled  Brea^,  228 

Russian  Cathedral,  87 

/tye  Bread,  31 

Salutamus,  138 

Sassafras  Tea,  56 

Scintilla,  31 

Secret,  155 

Service,  75 

Serving  Girl,  The,  200 

Shadow,  206 

She  does  not  know,  212 

She  kneeled  before  me  begging, 

190 
She  tripped  and  fell  against  a 

star,  51 


She  walked  along  the  crowded 
street,  107 

She  wears,  my  beloved,  a  rose 
upon  her  head,  61 

Ships  That  Pass  in  the  Night,  7 

Silhouette  on  the  face  of  the 
moon,  206 

Silvera,  Edward  S.,  213 

Sky  Pictures,  57 

Slay  fowl  and  beast;  pluck  clean 
the  vine,  207 

Snow  in  October,  71 

So  detached  and  cool  she  is,  143 

Softly  blow  lightly,  190 

Solace,  141 

Some  things  are  very  dear  to 
me,  161 

Sometimes  a  right  white  moun- 
tain, 57 

Sometimes  it  seems  as  though 
some  puppet  player,  46 

So  much  have  I  forgotten  in  ten 
years,  85 

Song  for  a  Dark  Girl,  147 

Song  of  the  Son,  96 

Sonnet,  72 

Sonnet,  160 

Sonnet,  161 

Sonnet  to  a  Negro  in  Harlem,  217 

South  Street,  214 

So  we,  who've  supped  the  self- 
same cup,  5 

Spencer,  Anne,  47 

Stream,  The,  228 

Substitution,  48 

Suicide's  Note,  151 

Summer  comes,  223 

Summer  Matures,  217 

Suppliant,  The,  76 

Supplication,  101 

Surrender,  38 

Sweet  timber  land,  172 

Sympathy,  8 

Tanka,  125 

Tell     me     is     there     anything 

lovelier,  36 
Tenebris,  40 
That  Hill,  109 


INDEX 


235 


The  baker's  boy  delivers  loaves, 

58 
The   band   of    Gideon   roam   the 

sky,  103 
The  bitterness  of  days  like  these 

we  know,  138 
The  breath  of  life  imbued  those 

few  dim  days,  70 
The  calabash  wherein  she  served 

my  food,  200 
The  calm,  151 
The  dandelion  stares,  229 
The  day  is  a  Negro,  129 
The  fruit  of  the  orchard  is  over- 
ripe, Elaine,  169 
The    heart    of    a    woman    goes 

forth  with  the  dawn,  81 
The  hills  are  wroth;  the  stones 

have  scored,  165 
The  night  is  beautiful,  150 
The  night  was  made  for  rest  and 

sleep,  142 
Then  the  golden  hour,  168 
There  is  a  coarseness,  214 
There  is  a  tree,  by  day,  40 
There  was  a  man,  11 
The    sass'fras    tea    is    red    and 

clear,  56 
The  sky   hangs  heavy   tonight, 

122 
The    sky,    lazily    disdaining    to 

pursue,  95 
The  sky  was  blue,  so  blue  that 

day,  45 
The  very  acme  of  my  woe,  76 
They   have   dreamed   as   young 

men  dream,  77 
This  is  the  debt  I  pay,  9 
This  lovely  flower  fell  to  seed, 

186 
Thou  art  not  dead,  although  the 

spoiler's  hand,  123 
Three  students  once  tarried  over 

the  Rhine,  17 
Through  the  pregnant  universe, 

84 
Thunder  of  the  Rain  God,  152 
Time  sitting  on   the   throne  of 

Memory,  32 


'Tis   queer,    it   is,    the    ways  to 

men,  39 
To    a     Certain    Lady,     in     Her 

Garden,  136 
To  a  Certain  Woman,  178 
To  a  Dark  Girl,  157 
To  an  Icicle,  110 
To  a  Persistent  Phantom,  113 
To  a  Young  Girl  Leaving  the  Hill 

Country,  165 
To  climb  a  hill  that  hungers  for 

the  sky,  219 
Today  I  saw  a  thing  of  arresting 

poignant  beauty,  71 
To  fling  my  arms  wide,  149 
To  John  Keats,  Poet,  at  Spring- 
time, 184 
To  Lovers  of  Earth:  Fair  Warn- 

ing,  182 
"To  meet  and  then  to  part,"  225 
To  Melody,  204 
Toomer,  Jean,  93 
Touche,  66 

Touch  me,  touch  me,  38 
Tragedy  of  Pete,  The,  11 
Transformation,  124 
Tree  Design,  A,  170 
Triviality,  A,  209 
True  Love,  213 
Twin  stars  through  my  purpling 

pane,  46 

Upstairs  on  the  third  floor,  221 

Walls  of  Jericho,  The,  106 

Way  down  South  in  Dixie,  147 

Way-side  Well,  The,  15 

Ways  o'  Men,  The,  39 

We    are    not    come    to    wage    a 

strife,  171 
We  ask  for  peace.     We,  at  the 

bound,  38 
Weeden,  Lula  Lowe,  225 
Well,  son,  I'll  tell  you,  151 
Were    you    a    leper    bathed    in 

wounds,  77 
We  shall  not  always  plant  while 

others  reap,  183 
We  Wear  the  Mask,  8 
What  Do  I  Care  for  Morning,  216 


236 


INDEX 


What  Need  Have   I  for  Memory? 

80 
What!     Itoscs    growing    in    the 

meadow,  59 
When  face  to  face  we  stand,  43 
When  first  you  sang  a  song  to 

me,  157 
When  I  am  Dead,  80 
When    I    come    down    to    sleep 

death's  endless  night,  25 
When  I  Die,  62 
When   the    Green    Lies    Over   the 

Earth,  41 
When  we  count  out  our  gold  at 

the  end  of  the  day,  75 


White  Witch,  The,  22 
Wild  Goat,  The,  87 
Wild  Roses,  59 
Williams,  Lucy  Ariel,  201 
Winter  Twilight,  A,  46 
Within  a  native  hut,  197 
Words!  Words!  65 

Yet  Do  I  Marvel,  182 

You  are  disdainful  and  magnifi- 
cent, 217 

Your  Hands,  44 

Your  Songs,  157 

Your  words  dropped  into  my 
heart,  91 

You  were  a  sophist,  156 


74   75    76   77  9   8    7    6   5   4   3    2    1 


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